The Federal Government said on Thursday that it
was spending N480 billion annually on the management and treatment of
malaria in the country.
President Goodluck Jonathan said this in Port
Harcourt at the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Town
Hall meeting on Malaria Elimination and Ground Breaking ceremony of
Biolarvicides (insecticides) factory.
Represented by the health minister, Onyebuchi
Chukwu, the president said that a child died of malaria in every 45
seconds in Africa.
He noted that malaria occurred and killed more
people in poor rural communities of the country, saying that poverty and
sickness were related.
The minister, who delivered a paper entitled,
‘Malaria and Socio-Economic Impact’, said people were sick with malaria
disease especially because they were poor.
He said poverty was a hindrance to the ownership of mosquito nets and noted that some people were poor due to sickness.
The minister said persons spent 45 percent of
their income to manage their health challenges, noting that it costs
Africa billions of money managing malaria.
“Malaria bites the income of families; malaria
means poverty and the elimination strategy should be based on
cost-effectiveness”, Chukwu said.
He advised Nigerians to guard their environment
and called for the re-introduction of sanitary officers to ensure clean
and healthy environment in the communities.
In his contribution, Rivers Governor Chibuike Ameachi said poverty remained a huge problem in the country.
The governor, however, said that government at all levels had taken measures to reduce the vice.
According to him, his administration has set up
several farms that employed thousands of people to encourage
self-reliance and reduce poverty.
Amaechi said the affluent in the society did not
help the matter, adding that “a lot of rich people have denied the
public their rights by stealing public funds”.
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