RTSS Malaria Vaccine helps reduce malaria cases and deaths in children under five

Dr Paul Boateng, Case Management Focal Person, National Malaria Elimination Programme, says the introduction of the RTSS malaria vaccine has contributed to a sharp decline in malaria morbidities and mortalities among children aged six to 59 months in the last three years. He told the Ghana News Agency that the vaccine together with other interventions targeted at children under five, such as the use on Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) indoor residual spraying among others has helped reduce malaria prevalence from 14.1 per cent in 2019 to 8.6 in 2022. Findings from the 2022 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) indicates that malaria prevalence in children aged six to 59 months is 8.6 per cent according to microscopy results. However, the malaria prevalence among children under five in rural areas is 12.8 per cent, about three times that of urban areas which is 4.3 per cent. The study shows that Greater Accra has the lowest prevalence of 2.0 per cent, followed by Western North 4.4 per cent and Volta 6.4 per cent. The regions with the highest prevalence of malaria according to the survey are Oti 15.0 per cent, Upper West 13.4 per cent and the Upper East 12.2 per cent regions. In all, half of the 16 regions recorded malaria prevalence above 10 percent. The survey results also indicate that the prevalence of malaria in children has declined over the past eight years, falling by more than a third from 26.7 per cent in 2014 to 8.6 per cent in 2022. Dr Boateng said data showed, evidently, that the introduction of the malaria vaccine has contributed to the reduction of malaria cases and deaths among children under five, he added that, reducing malaria mortality is one of the areas that Ghana has made gains. ‘About 10 years ago, we were recording about 2000 malaria related deaths, but, with consistent works and the vaccine, malaria deaths were around 175 last year,’ he said. In 2019, Ghana joined Malawi and Kenya to launch the Malaria Vaccine Implementation Programme. As part of a multi-pronged strategy to prevent malaria-related disease and deaths in the country, it targeted children for vaccination in 42 districts across seven regions. In February this year, the country launched an expansion of the malaria immunization program, which is expected to deliver malaria vaccines to children in 51 additional districts in the seven regions. The Minister for Health, Mr Kwaku Agyeman-Manu who launched the expansion of the programme said the malaria vaccine is safe, effective, and well tolerated, he encouraged mothers to make their children available to be inoculated when eligible. Dr Paul Boateng said presently, the vaccine is being administered in 93 districts in seven regions thus the Upper East, Bono, Bono East, Ahafo, Volta, Oti, and Central regions. He said the vaccine has been safely given alongside other routine immunization in four doses, the first dose is administered at 6 months, the second at seven months, the third at nine months and the fourth at 18 months. The National Malaria Focal Person said the coverage and the level of the vaccine acceptability has been encouragingly high, with the administration of the fourths dose being the only challenge. ‘Coverage for the fourth dose was low because it was given at age two and was not aligned with the other vaccines, we have now moved it to 18 months to align to the measles rubella vaccine, and we have realized that the coverage is improving,’ he said. Dr Boateng said a total of 1,486,770 of the RTSS vaccine has been ad mistered to children in Ghana since May 2019 to December 2022. He said Ghana intends to scale up the childhood malaria vaccination in all parts of the country based on the vaccine availability beginning from areas with the highest malaria burden, ‘What has stalled the process is vaccine supply and availability.’ He added. Malaria is a life-threatening disease caused by parasites that are transmitted to people through the bites of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes. It is preventable and curable. Children under 5 years of age are the most vulnerable group affected by malaria; in 2021, they accounted for nearly 80 per cent of all malaria deaths in the World Health Organisation (WHO) African Region. People who get malaria are typically very sick with high fevers, shaking chills, and flu-like illness. In Ghana, the total number of Outpatient Department (OPD) malaria cases recorded in health facilities declined from 6.1 million in 2019 to 5.2 million in 2022. The East Mamprusi district in the Northeast Region recorded 73,782 the highest number of Outpatient Department (OPD) malaria cases followed by Jaman North 63,776 and Jaman South 55,672 both in the Bono Region. This report was made possible with technical support from the Center for Science and Health Communication (CSHC) and funding from the National Research Foundation, South Africa.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ghana’s music generally lacks quality – Record producer Boachie-Ansah

Kofi Boachie-Ansah, a record producer and creative entrepreneur, says there is a general lack of quality in the music being churned out by Ghanaian musicians, comparing it to neighbouring countries. According to Boachie-Ansah, who is known in the entertainment industry as Beatmenance, the production of Ghanaian songs comes with low quality, which has hindered the growth of Ghana’s music. He said this at the third National Music Summit presented by the Vodafone Ghana Music Awards (VGMA) as part of activities to mark World Music Day. ‘If you compare the music we produce to music from neighbouring countries, there is a general lack of quality, with regard to low production quality. ‘We need to be intentional about the overall quality of our music on the technical and creative sides,’ he said. Beatmenace noted that many Ghanaian music producer do not get the right mixes to help improve the quality sound which he believes was a fundamental problem that has held back Ghana’s music. He further stated that the lack of a strong music identity has contributed to the setback of Ghanaian music and believes that until Ghanaian artistes begin to learn about our music, this problem would persist. Beatmenance also urged Ghanaian musicians to explore various genres of music to make them versatile and learn more about music.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Government forces kill five men in Ekona

At least five men were summarily executed on Saturday June 24, 2023, by government forces in Ekona, Muyuka subdivision, South West region, CNA confirmed from videos and witnesses.

Houses were also set on fire.

“The guys were in a friend’s house, discussing and entertaining themselves. The military surrounded the house and shot them at close range. After k!lling them, some were b*tchered with axe,” a witness who visited the scene said.

CNA was able to review videos and pictures from the scene, confirming the authenticity.

“My neighbors son was among the victims,” another source added.

Videos show a man axed in his jaw while others had bullets ripped into their bodies.

No one has explained what provoked the killing. Surrounding residents have been helping to gather their corpses.

Earlier on June 21, a news blog handled by a separatist group announced that government forces were going to attack Ekona.

State sponsored Activists on their part shared pictures of the incident, insinuating that those killed were separatists who gathered to celebrate the birthday of a fighter popularly called Sagat.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Cameroonians trapped in St Kitts demand release

Some 14 survivors of a boat accident in St Kitts, near Texas, USA, have demanded to be released. The Cameroonians who said they were fleeing from armed conflict in the Anglophone regions, have been held in detention centers since the incident in March.

On March 28, 2923, about 30 passengers were onboard a fishing boat that sank in the Caribbean off the coast of St Kitts. At least 3 people died and 13 went missing after the boat capsized.

Of the 14 survivors, all Cameroonians, 3 are women, 4 are teachers, with the majority coming from Lebialem division in the South West region.

The victims say they have been held for too long in detention centers. They want to:

Freedom to get our United Nations ID cards.

Freedom to speak with US Embassy and US Congress.

Freedom to get home to our community in Texas.

The founder of the Cameroon American Council, Sylvie Ngassa Qwasinwi Bello, told CNA that “I am a sailor myself. So their survival stories are so improbable.” She confirmed that she has been advocating for their plights to be heard by the US.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Seychelles’ former President James Mancham honoured in a National Museum exhibition

Seychelles’ late former President, Sir James Richard Mancham, is being honoured as a contemporary political figure in the island nation through an exhibition that opened on Tuesday.

The exhibition, depicting the life of Mancham, is being held at the National Museum of History at the former Supreme Court Building in the capital Victoria. It has a collection of items donated by the family of the late president as part of the Independence Day activity of the National Museums.

Various artefacts are being displayed until September showing the life of Mancham who was awarded a Knight Commander of the British Empire in 1976.

The director of the National Museum, Beryl Ondiek, told SNA “We wanted to show his life as a political figure, while the photo albums also on exhibition also provide glimpses of his personality.

Various artefacts showing the life of Mancham are being displayed until September. (Seychelles Nation) Photo License: CC-BY

She added that “it was quite fast to set up the exhibition as there are items that the family had given in addition to what the museum already had in their possession.”

Alexander Mancham – the late Sir Mancham’s son told reporters that the exhibition is “a unique opportunity for people who didn’t know the works of my father to come down and learn about history and the process of national reconciliation and all that that entails.”

He said that there is a desk on display which is “where he sat every day and worked relentlessly around the clock.”

He added that “it was important to have such an exhibition as clearly, we live in a world that is still pulverised, still polarised, and still requires a fundamental change at many level. I think people like my father will be sorely missed.”

Among the items on display are his various passports which Ondiek shared that “Sir Mancham was someone without a nationality during the times that he was exiled from his country. He was only given the documents so he could travel since he did not have a Seychelles Passport.”

Mancham was the first President of Seychelles, a group of 115 islands in the western Indian Ocean, and held office from 1976 to 1977. He was overthrown in a coup d’etat on June 5, 1977, after which the former Prime Minister, France Albert Rene, became the President.

The exhibition has a collection of items donated by the family of the late president. (Seychelles Nation) Photo License: CC-BY

During the ceremony to officially open the exhibition, many of the guests were individuals who were also exiled or who had kept close ties to Mancham during those times.

James Mancham was born on August 11, 1939, he studied at the Seychelles College after “his father sent him to London to Study Law,” recounted David Andre, Secretary General for the Seychelles National Institute of Culture, Heritage and the Arts.

Mancham went to Fulsome College in the UK to study law and was called to the Bar in 1961.

After additional studies in economics at the University of Paris, he returned to Seychelles and served as a barrister at the Supreme Court.

While, many present shared interesting anecdotes of the former president, Philip Figaro, Mancham’s head of security ever since he returned from exile in 1992, told SNA that the photos bring back fond memories of his former boss.

“Although the exhibition does not prominently show the joie-de vivre he is so well known for, it brings back memories of how my boss was a generous man, and how he would always talk to everyone,” he said.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

Football: Seychelles’ Kevin Betsy appointed assistant coach for Cambridge United

Seychelles’ Kevin Betsy has joined England’s League One side Cambridge United as assistant head coach.

Betsy will work alongside the Cambridge United head coach, Mark Bonner, as the club look for a way into the championship.

According to the club’s website, Betsy said: “I am very excited. It is a fantastic opportunity to join Mark, Ben and the football club.”

“They are really clear with their ideas on how they have been working, but also how they would like to improve in certain areas and how I fit into the current staff. It was a really easy decision for me to come to work with fantastic people, at a really good Club,” he added.

Betsy, 45, had an 18-year career as a football player which started at Woking football club. He has since then played for Fulham, Barnsley, Oldham, Bristol City, Southend and Wycombe Wanderers.

Betsy is the son of Lewis Betsy, a well-known football player in Seychelles before he was exiled in 1979.

Kevin Betsy also played in the Seychelles national team, making seven appearances and scoring one goal. He played for the Seychelles side at the 2011 Indian Ocean Island Games and scored in the final against Mauritius, which finished 1–1. He also scored again in the resulting penalty shootout, which the Seychelles won 4–3 to become the champions of the games.

In his footballer career, he made one appearance for Fulham, in the English Premier League, under Jean Tigana in a game against Manchester United at Old Trafford. He also played on loan at AFC Bournemouth and Hull City.

On Cambridge United’s website, coach Bonner is quoted as saying, “I am excited to welcome Kevin to the Club and believe he will be a fantastic addition to our coaching team. His coaching journey has been varied and has seen him work with some top young talent in the development pathways, but his experiences across a variety of roles, along with his personality, will make him an excellent fit.”

Betsy began his coaching with England’s youth squads in 2016 and in 2021 he was appointed as head coach of Arsenal’s under-23s.

Betsy has also been senior head coach four months at league two side Crawley Town. He was later part of Kolo Toure’s staff at Wigan Athletic but left after Toure’s sacking after just seven games.

Betsy begins work immediately ahead of the squad’s return to pre-season training next week.

Cambridge finished in 20th place last season and will be looking for further improvement in the upcoming league one campaign.

Source: Seychelles News Agency