IRVING, Texas - Friday, April 25th 2014 [ME NewsWire]
Increased funding to support partnerships with nearly 20 organizations fighting malaria
ExxonMobil has committed more than $120 million to fighting malaria, reaching more than 105 million people
Partnerships helped distribute more than 13 million bed nets,
administer 2 million malaria treatments and train 355,000 health workers
(BUSINESS
WIRE) ExxonMobil marked World Malaria Day today by participating in
events across Africa and announcing more than $10 million in new grants
to support lifesaving programs across Africa and in the Pacific Rim,
where the disease is a major threat to health and economic development.
The
grants from ExxonMobil and the ExxonMobil Foundation will support a
wide range of research, advocacy, treatment and prevention programs to
accelerate progress in the fight against malaria, which still claims
more than 627,000 lives each year, mostly children under the age of
five.
In addition to funding, ExxonMobil provides business
expertise and insights to help strengthen these initiatives. ExxonMobil
has been committed to fighting malaria for more than a decade, and has
provided more than $120 million to programs that are helping more than
105 million people. The new grants build on the company’s support for
innovative programs to control and one day eliminate deaths from this
preventable and treatable disease.
To mark World Malaria Day,
ExxonMobil is participating in events across Africa – including the
launch of Malaria No More’s award-winning NightWatch campaign in
Nigeria, La Coalition de la Communauté des Affaires Contre le Sida, la
Tuberculose et le Paludisme’s Malaria March in Cameroon and CORE Group’s
Malaria Day play in Angola. Through events such as these, combined with
advocacy and education efforts, ExxonMobil aims to increase awareness
and progress in the fight against malaria in the communities in which it
works.
“We have seen firsthand how the lives of ExxonMobil
workers, families and communities are directly harmed by malaria – and
improved by the efforts of our partners on the front line fighting this
disease,” said Suzanne McCarron, president of the ExxonMobil Foundation.
“Together, we are investing in sustainable solutions to help people
live a healthy life without the burden of malaria.”
Unprecedented
commitment from the global community in the past decade has led to a 45
percent reduction in malaria mortality worldwide since 2000. Yet the
disease is still a leading cause of death among children. Beyond lives
lost, the disease costs sub-Saharan Africa billions of dollars in lost
gross domestic product and accounts for as much as 40 percent of public
health expenditures in some countries.
"The private sector has a
crucial role to play in defeating malaria and alleviating poverty,” said
Dr. Fatoumata Nafo-Traoré, Executive Director of Roll Back Malaria
Partnership. “The engagement of ExxonMobil shows how public-private
partnerships provide the resources, knowledge and expertise that drives
progress in the global fight against malaria, which in turn drives
development.”
ExxonMobil’s grants will help drive a comprehensive
response to the disease that generates deeper impact in local
communities and around the world. Highlights of ExxonMobil’s 2014
malaria grantees include:
Grassroot Soccer to use the
convening power of soccer to educate and mobilize youth in Nigeria,
Equatorial Guinea and Tanzania to protect themselves and their
communities from malaria.
Seed Global Health to place U.S.
medical volunteers in tropical disease settings to help train the next
generation of health care professionals.
Harvard Malaria
Initiative to support Dr. Regina Rabinovich as the ExxonMobil Malaria
Scholar-in-Residence at the Harvard School of Public Health, where she
is advancing innovative strategies to combat malaria. ExxonMobil is also
supporting a leadership development course for emerging malaria leaders
from developing countries.
Cameroon’s Business Coalition against
Malaria, Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS to strengthen coordination between
the private-sector response to malaria and other serious diseases.
Norwegian Red Cross to conduct a low-cost mobile phone malaria survey
on use of bed nets, diagnostics and approved malaria treatments in
affected communities in West Africa.
PATH Malaria Vaccine
Initiative (MVI) to educate and train African health officials and
opinion leaders to advocate for effective implementation policies in
advance of the potential 2015 introduction of the first vaccine to
protect against the disease.
ExxonMobil is one of the leading
private-sector investors in malaria. Its Workforce Malaria Control
Program offers prevention tools, early diagnosis and treatment to
company employees and surrounding communities. Since 2000, ExxonMobil’s
partnerships have helped distribute 13.1 million bed nets, administer
1.9 million malaria treatment doses and train more than 355,000 health
workers and counselors working on the front lines of malaria prevention
and control.
ExxonMobil’s other 2014 malaria grant recipients
include Accordia Global Health Foundation, Africare, Global Health
Corps, Jhpiego, UN Foundation – Nothing But Nets, Medicines for Malaria
Venture, USAID – President’s Malaria Initiative, Oxford University,
Population Services International and Ajuda de Desenvolvimento de Pova
para Povo.
About the ExxonMobil Foundation
The ExxonMobil
Foundation is the primary philanthropic arm of Exxon Mobil Corporation
(NYSE:XOM) in the United States. The foundation and the corporation
engage in a range of philanthropic activities advancing education, with a
focus on math and science in the United States, promoting women as
catalysts for economic development, and combating malaria. In 2013,
together with its employees and retirees, Exxon Mobil Corporation, its
divisions and affiliates, and the ExxonMobil Foundation provided $269
million in contributions worldwide. www.exxonmobil.com.
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Contacts
ExxonMobil
Media Relations, 972-444-1107
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