Suzy
Honduras
Suzy is Miskito, an Indigenous community from Central America.
Suzy she has seen thousands of patients, either testing or treating them for malaria, since she became a community health volunteer two decades ago.
“Every week there are 25 people, almost 30. I love my people. They come to my house, and I look after them at night, in the morning, at whatever time,” she says. “I look after everyone, regardless of where they come from.”
“I take blood samples do rapid diagnostic tests and I diagnose. I then give them tablets straight away,” she says.
In 2020 COVID-19 hit, and later that same year Tropical Storm Eta ripped through the country followed by Hurricane Iota only two weeks later. The deadly storms closed health units, including facilities providing malaria services. Surveillance and tracing of malaria cases had to be scaled back, and less people were visiting clinics for testing and treatment due to fear of contracting COVID-19.
In 2020, rather than recording a decrease in cases as Honduras had done nearly every year for the last two decades, the number of malaria cases recorded increased.
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©The Global Fund/Tomas Ayuso/Panos