Has COVID19 derailed Bhutan’s national malaria elimination goal? A commentary
Date
2021-01-06
Authors
Penjor, Kinley
Tobgyal
Zangpo, Tandin
Clements, Archie
Gray, Darren
Wangdi, Kinley
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BioMed Central
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in massive global disruptions with considerable impact on the delivery of
health services and national health programmes. Since the detection of the frst COVID-19 case on 5th March 2020,
the Royal Government of Bhutan implemented a number of containment measures including border closure and
national lockdowns. Against the backdrop of this global COVID-19 pandemic response, there was a sudden surge of
locally-transmitted malaria cases between June to August 2020. There were 20 indigenous cases (zero Plasmodium
falciparum and 20 Plasmodium vivax) from a total of 49 cases (seven P. falciparum and 42 P. vivax) in 2020 compared to
just two from a total of 42 in 2019. Over 80% of the cases were clustered in malaria endemic district of Sarpang. This
spike of malaria cases was attributed to the delay in the delivery of routine malaria preventive interventions due to
the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, Bhutan is unlikely to achieve the national goal of malaria elimination by 2020.
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Malaria Journal
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Journal article
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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