October 27, 2006 By Kathy L. Gilbert
LUANDA, Angola – Sometimes malaria can kill a child before anyone even knows the
child has been infected. The Rev. Domingos Kafuanda says
the recent death of an 8-year-old girl in his congregation was a grim reminder
of how deadly malaria can be. The child was singing in
the children's choir on Sunday. "She was happy and playing," he says. "We got
word she died the next day of malaria." People sometimes
ignore a headache and fever that may be the first symptoms of being infected,
he says. "Malaria can be in your body for a long time.
Children can have fever one day and be feeling well the next; that is why it is
so important to be tested," he says. "Her death really moved the church and reminded
us we need to be vigilant about prevention and testing." The
complications are that not every mosquito carries malaria, and sometimes it is
just impossible to avoid getting bitten. Kafuanda, a
United Methodist district superintendent for the Angola West Annual (regional)
Conference, was bedridden with a high fever from malaria just two days before
he spoke to United Methodist News Service about the killer that claims so many
lives in this southwest African country. He says he sleeps
under a mosquito net and is well aware of the danger, "but sometimes you have
to get out from under the net, and sometimes mosquitoes get inside." Breeding
grounds Neighborhoods that lack potable water, adequate
sewage systems and are overcrowded create the perfect breeding grounds for misery.
Dr. Pedro Francisco Chagas and Dr. Laurinda Quipungo
sat down with a United Methodist delegation from the Board of Global Ministries
and United Methodist Communications to talk about the problems they face every
day in another part of the country at the Malanje Provincial Hospital. "We
have a population of 1.2 million in 14 municipalities," Chagas says. "It is a
dream of mine to have one doctor for every 10,000 people." Right now that dream
is far from coming true, he says. Setting priorities
is hard because the problems are so many, he says. The top diseases the doctors
face are malaria, respiratory problems, gastric problems, AIDS/HIV and sleeping
sickness. The greatest threat is to children under 5 and pregnant women. "If
a child has a fever, the first thing we must assume is malaria," says Quipungo,
a pediatric doctor who is also the wife of Bishop Jose Quipango, United Methodist
leader of the East Angola Annual (regional) Conference. Along
with fever and headaches, other symptoms are coughing and convulsions, sometimes
followed by a coma. Children often become anemic, which weakens their ability
to fight off the disease. Cerebral malaria attacks the brain, and the person never
fully recovers, Quipungo says. "Sometimes parents see
the hospital as the last alternative, and it is too late when they bring in their
children." No protection Jose
Vieira Dias Van-Dunem, the vice minister of health for Angola, says 30 years of
war have left the country without much protection from deadly diseases. "Resources
are not elastic," he says. "Many resources went to the war and were not used for
health or potable water. In the last four years, that is becoming the past." Angola
won its 16-war of liberation from Portugal in 1975 but was thrust into a long
civil war that lasted from 1976 to 2001. Thousands died, infrastructures were
destroyed across the country, and more than 2 million people were displaced. The
government's top priorities are promoting education, health and national unity,
and fighting poverty, Van-Dunem says. The church has a major role to play. Angola
had the deadliest outbreak of Marburg disease ever recorded in 2005. When the
fatal disease, associated with fever and bleeding, swept through the country last
year, Van-Dunem says he went to see the African religious leaders. He told them
to tell people to stop the African tradition of kissing and touching the dead
body because the disease was spreading as a result. The word got out and the disease
was stopped. Churches can help with education, he says.
In seven of the 18 northern provinces, sleeping sickness
is a major problem. The disease is spread by the bite of a tsetse fly, and 40,000
people die every year in regions of Sub-Saharan Africa. Van-Dunem says the fly
is attracted to black or dark blue cloth so the government has made traps of dark
cloth to catch the flies. "People are stealing the traps
to make clothing for their children," he says. "Then the children become the traps
for the flies. "We as Africans listen to our elders,"
he says. "Our relationship with churches is very important, but we have to be
greedy, we want more." How to help The
United Methodist Church is responding in many ways to the killer diseases. People
interested in getting involved can help provide health care, mosquito nets and
clean water through the Advance for Christ and His Church, a church giving program.
Donations can be sent to UMCOR Advance #982009, Malaria Control, and other vital
Advance ministries in four ways: • Online. Go to
http://gbgm-umc.org/give/advance/.
• Local church. Checks should be made payable to
the local church. Write the name of the ministry and the Advance code number on
the check. • Mail. Checks can be made payable to
"Advance GCFA" and sent to: Advance GCFA, P.O. Box 9068, GPO, New York, NY 10087-9068.
Write the project name and its Advance code number. •
Telephone. Call (888) 252-6174 to make a credit-card donation. Other
Advance ministries in Angola, along with their project numbers, include Agriculture
and Animal Restocking Project, #15082T; Bishop Emilio de Carvalho Theological
School, #14383M; Evangelization, #15061A; Help Me Fishing, #14384O; Illiteracy
Program, #15081A; Library Construction and Books for Children, #14974N; and Medical
Center, #15010N. United Methodist News Service Kathy
L. Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer. |