Africa As Home of Diseases
Africa As Home of Diseases
Africa As Home of Diseases
2
Africa as home of diseases
• A number of diseases plague the African African Trypanosomiasis/
continent: Sleeping Sickness
Malaria Schistosomiasis/ Biharzia
Tuberculosis Ebola
Diarrhoea / cholera Guinea worm
HIV/AIDS
Lassa fever
3
malaria
4
Malaria: some facts
• By far the most widespread deadly disease in the world;
common in hot, tropical regions of the world
• Caused by plasmodium parasite from the female anopheles
mosquito
• 90% of all cases of malaria occur in sub-Saharan Africa and
affects mostly young children and pregnant women
• Malaria affects more than 500 million people annually, and
causes between 1 and 3 million deaths
• Malaria is both preventable and treatable
5
Malaria: some facts 2
• Malaria in pregnancy increases the risk of: mental
anemia, stillbirth, spontaneous abortion, low birth
weight and neonatal death
• Malaria and HIV are two of the most devastating
health problems of Africa- together they cause more
than 4 million deaths a year. HIV patients are
particularly vulnerable to malaria
• Economic costs: the economic cost of malaria in Africa
is huge. Malaria is estimated to cost Africa more than
$12 billion every year in lost GDP
6
Malaria: what is it?
• Malaria is caused by a
parasite known as
Plasmodium, injected into
the body (blood) by the
female Anopheles
mosquitoes
• Malaria is a disease of
poverty —
• It is also a cause of poverty –
families spend huge portions
of their income on cure for
malaria.
7
Is there a vaccine for Malaria?
8
How can a person get malaria?
• the bite of the female Anopheles mosquitoes.
• transmitted through blood transfusion, organ
transplant, or the shared use of needles or syringes
contaminated with blood.
• It can also be passed on from mother to child during
child birth (called congenital malaria).
9
What are the signs and symptoms of
malaria?
12
Preventing malaria
• Sleep under an insecticide mosquito net over your bed at
night.
• Spray your room often with an insecticide before you go to
bed.
• Apply a reliable insect repellent to your skin and clothes.
• Cover bedroom doors and windows with fine mesh netting.
• Use air-conditioning or a fan in your room, as mosquitoes are
less active in cooler temperatures.
13
EBOLA
14
Ebola statistics
15
Ebola statistics
16
Ebola: Africa's bloody disease
• The Ebola virus was named after the Ebola river in the Congo.
• The Ebola virus was first associated with an outbreak of 318
cases of a hemorrhagic disease in Zaire. Of the 318 cases, 280
of them died.
• That same year, 1976, Ebola killed 156 out of 284 infected
people in Sudan
• The Zaire strain of Ebola virus has a mortality rate of 88%
• Countries affected so far are Congo, Sudan, Ivory coast and
Uganda, Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone
17
How is Ebola spread?
• Body fluids (blood, vomit, sweat, or sputum) from a
person who is sick with or has died from Ebola.
• Contaminated sharp objects like needles
• Infected animals (blood or meat)
18
Ebola’s frightening symptoms
• The incubation period is 4 to 16 days.
• The onset of the disease is sudden, with fever, chills, headache,
anorexia, and muscle pain
• As the disease progresses, nausea, vomiting, sore throat, stomach
pain, and diarrhea are common
• Most patients develop hemorrhages, usually between days 5 and
7.
• Bleeding occurs from multiple sites, including digestive tract,
lungs and gums.
• Death occurs within 7 to 16 days
19
Treatment of Ebola
20
Treatment of Ebola
• Use of intravenous fluids to correct dehydration due to diarrhea and
vomiting.
21
Hiv/aids
22
Hiv/aids: facts
• Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)is the virus that causes Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
• AIDS attacks the immune system causing its progressive failure and allowing
opportunistic infections
• HIV/AIDS is among the ten most widespread diseases in Africa yet it is one of
the most preventable.
• In Africa, there is no region that is exempt from HIV/AIDS
23
Hiv/aids: facts 2
• There are more than 33million people infected with the
HIV/AIDS.
• 65% of these live in sub-Saharan Africa
• The progression from initial infection with HIV to end-
stage AIDS varies from person to person and can take
more than 10 years
• Risk of HIV transmission from mother-to-child can be
greatly reduced through effective management
programs
24
TRANSMISSION OF HIV/AIDS
25
HIV is not transmitted by
• Public baths
• Coughing, sneezing
• Handshakes
• Insect bites • Work or school
contact
• Touching, hugging
• Using telephones
• Water, food • Sharing cups,
glasses, plates, or
other utensils
26
HIV/AIDS IS CONTRACTED THROUGH
28
Prevention of HIV Transmission
29
Prevention of HIV Transmission
30
SCHISTOSOMIASIS/bilharzia
31
SCHISTOSOMIASIS/bilharzia
33
AFRICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS
• The disease is endemic in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease is
caused by infection with the Rhodesians subspecies of the
extracellular parasite Trypanosoma brucei and is transmitted to
humans by bites of infected tsetse flies.
• Symptoms tend to include; headache, intermittent fever, facial
oedema, urticarial and pruritus,
• Preventive methods include; wearing of protective clothing of dull
colours and use bed nets in areas with tsetse flies.
• Avoid areas where African trypanosomiasis is endemic.
• Only four drugs are registered for the treatment of human African
trypanosomiasis: pentamidine, suramin, melarsoprol and
eflornithine
34
You don’t want to get infected with any of
these …….
35
You don’t want to get infected with any of
these …….
36
Mother-to-child infection
37
You don’t want to get infected with any of
these …….
38