Remote Villagers Blame Stale Water, Bad Spirits for Malaria

Veal Veng commune in Pursat province is one of the most dangerous places in Cam­bo­dia to fall asleep without a mosquito net.

The government estimates that between 50 percent and 60 percent of Veal Veng’s 7,000 residents are infected with malaria. And Dis­ad­van­taged Cambodians Organization, a local NGO funded by the German government, estimates that perhaps 95 percent of the villagers carry the parasite.

The organization traveled Wednes­day to Veal Veng to im­preg­­nate bed nets with mosquito-repellent and begin a multiyear project train­ing health workers and villagers about the disease.

“This region is covered in forests and has the highest level of malaria in the country,” DCO Chairman Sam Oeurn said.

Villagers, he said, had a limited understanding of the disease.

“We have conducted surveys among the villagers about the cause of malaria and the number one answer was drinking bad water,” he said.

He said that mosquitoes were the second favorite answer, but villagers showed little knowledge of when malaria-infected mosquitoes bite (from dusk until dawn) or how to prevent bites. The third choice was “bad spirits,” Sam Oeurn said.

The chairman said that he is conducting training sessions with village volunteers.

“Among the health workers there is a lot of use of traditional treatments. Training is very limited,” he said. He said that the government has neglected the commune because it takes hours to reach over extremely rough, un­paved roads.

Norn Saokry, manager of ma­laria control at the National Ma­laria Center, confirmed Wednes­day that Veal Veng has the highest rate of malaria infection in the nation.

“Mosquitoes like to live there,” he said.

But he denied that health workers in the area are not properly trained. “We trained local peo­ple to treat people by testing blood through a quick-tester,” Norn Saokry said, ad­ding that the government has visited Veal Veng regularly for at least 10 years.

The German Embassy said Wednesday that Germany has granted DCO $456,000 in support over three years.

“We identified with their work as the target is to reduce the pov­er­ty of marginalized groups,” Ger­man Embassy Charge d’Af­fairs Theo Kidess said Wednes­day.

Sam Oeurn said that combating malaria in the area is the first step in improving the lives of its inhabitants. Since 2000, DCO has brought the villagers emergency food supplies, but the group sees education and enhancement of local agriculture as key to developing the area once the devastating malaria plague has been beaten back.

“In this area many of the people are former Khmer Rouge fighters. The men can read be­cause they were soldiers but among the women, there is not ed­ucation and they are il­literate,” Sam Oeurn said.

“Part of our project, once their health problems are addressed, is to find sources of in­come for them,” he said, mentioning soy bean cultivation as one possible ex­­port product that could be fostered in the area.

(Additional     re­­­port­ing by Lor Chandara)

 

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