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		New malaria drug for babies offers hope to health workers in Uganda
		[August 20, 2025] 
		By PATRICK ONEN and RODNEY MUHUMUZA 
		KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — Alice Nekesa did not know she was infected with 
		malaria-causing parasites until it was too late. She was in the fourth 
		month of pregnancy last year when she started bleeding, a miscarriage 
		later attributed to untreated malaria in her.
 The Ugandan farmer said recently that she regretted the loss of what 
		would have been her second child “because I didn’t discover malaria and 
		treat it early.”
 
 Variations of such cases are commonly reported by Ugandan health workers 
		who witness stillbirths or feverish babies that die within days from 
		undiagnosed malaria. The deaths are part of a wider death toll tied to 
		the mosquito-borne disease, the deadliest across Africa, but one easily 
		treated in adults who seek timely medical care.
 
 Until recently, a major gap in malaria treatment was how to care for 
		newborns and infants infected with malaria who weren’t strong enough to 
		receive regular medication. That changed last month when Swiss medical 
		regulators approved medicine from the Basel-based pharmaceutical company 
		Novartis for babies weighing between 2 and 5 kilograms (nearly 4½ to 11 
		pounds).
 
 Swissmedic said the treatment, a sweet-tasting tablet that disperses 
		into a syrup when dropped into water, was approved in coordination with 
		the World Health Organization under a fast-track authorization process 
		to help developing countries access much-needed treatment.
 
		
		 
		Africa’s 1.5 billion people accounted for 95% of an estimated 597,000 
		malaria deaths worldwide in 2023, according to the WHO. More than 
		three-quarters of those deaths were among children.
 In Uganda, an east African country of 45 million people, there were 12.6 
		million malaria cases and nearly 16,000 deaths in 2023. Many were 
		children younger than 5 and pregnant women, according to WHO.
 
 Nigeria, Congo and Uganda — in that order — are the African countries 
		most burdened by malaria, a parasitic disease transmitted to humans 
		through the bites of infected mosquitoes that thrive and breed in 
		stagnant water.
 
 The drug approved by Swiss authorities, known as Coartem Baby in some 
		countries and Riamet Baby in others, is a combination of two 
		antimalarials. It is a lower dose version of a tablet previously 
		approved for other age groups, including for older children. Before 
		Coartem Baby, antimalarial drugs designed for older children were 
		administered to small infants with careful adjustments to avoid overdose 
		or toxicity.
 
 Ugandan authorities, who have been working to update clinical guidelines 
		for treating malaria, say the new drug will be rolled out as soon as 
		possible. It is not yet available in public hospitals.
 
 The development of Coartem Baby has given hope to many, with local 
		health workers and others saying the medicine will save the lives of 
		many infants.
 
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            A health worker talks to patients at Wakiso Health Centre IV in 
			Kampala, Wakiso, Tuesday, July 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Patrick Onen) 
            
			
			
			 
		Ronald Serufusa, the top malaria official for the district of Wakiso, 
		which shares a border with the Ugandan capital of Kampala, said he 
		believes Coartem Baby will be available “very, very soon” and that one 
		priority is sensitizing the people adhering to treatment.
 Some private pharmacies already have access to Coartem Baby, “flavored 
		with orange or mango” to make it palatable for infants, he said.
 
 During the so-called malaria season, which coincides with rainy periods 
		twice a year, long lines of sick patients grow outside government-run 
		health centers across Uganda. Many are often women with babies strapped 
		to their backs.
 
 Health workers now are trained to understand that “malaria can be 
		implicated among newborns,” even when other dangerous conditions like 
		sepsis are present, Serufusa said.
 
 “If they don’t expand their investigations to also suspect malaria, then 
		it goes unnoticed,” he said, speaking of health workers treating babies.
 
 The Malaria Consortium, a global nonprofit based in London, in a 
		statement described the approval of Coartem Baby as “a major leap 
		forward for saving the lives of young children in countries affected by 
		malaria.”
 
 In addition to Uganda, the drug will be rolled out in Burkina Faso, Côte 
		d’Ivoire, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, and Tanzania, the group 
		said.
 
 Jane Nabakooza, a pediatrician with Uganda's malaria control program, 
		said she expects the government will make Coartem Baby available to 
		patients free of charge, even after losing funding when the U.S. shrank 
		its foreign aid program earlier this year.
 
		
		 
		Some malaria funding from outside sources, including the Global Fund to 
		Fight AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis, remains available for programs 
		such as indoor spraying to kill mosquitoes that spread the 
		malaria-causing parasite.
 Because of funding shortages, “we are focusing on those that are 
		actually prone to severe forms of malaria and malaria deaths, and these 
		are children under 5 years,” she said.
 
			
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