• DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Dengue
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
      • Media workshops
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Our story
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
  • DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Dengue
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
      • Media workshops
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Our story
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
Home > Stories

Highlighting gender-based treatment gaps on International Women’s Day: Mary Alamak’s story

Home > Stories

Highlighting gender-based treatment gaps on International Women’s Day: Mary Alamak’s story

8 Mar 2023

Mary Alamak was infected with visceral leishmaniasis, also known as kala-azar, while she was pregnant 13 years ago. Nothing prepared her for the anguish she would face trying to find out what she was ailing from.  

The mother of four from Longelai Village in West Pokot County, Kenya rapidly lost weight, going from 80 kg to just 45 kg.  She had to be carried around because she was too weak to walk and sank into a depression, fearful of losing her baby. A series of tests for malaria, HIV, and brucellosis at the Kacheliba Sub-County Hospital all came back negative.

‘My health continued to deteriorate by the day. I could barely eat, the fevers were persistent, and my stomach was in so much pain. I thought it was the pregnancy that was causing my misery.’

Mary Alamak

After a month of distress, it was finally confirmed that she had visceral leishmaniasis, after she told her doctor that her husband had experienced the same symptoms and had been treated for this neglected tropical disease. Mary was immediately put on treatment with liposomal amphotericin B, the second-line treatment used to treat visceral leishmaniasis in patients who don’t respond to the first-line treatment. This treatment is also used to treat special populations such as pregnant women, people over 65 years of age, and children less than two years old. This 10-day treatment is effective but very expensive and needs to be stored at 2–8°C, which presents a challenge for many of the hospitals in endemic regions.

Mary is among the lucky few to receive effective treatment to cure visceral leishmaniasis. There has been little research conducted to find new, better, and more affordable treatments for special populations such as expectant and lactating women. Women are often excluded from clinical trials, making it difficult to develop drugs that are safe and effective during pregnancy.

DNDi is committed to implementing best practices in gender-responsive drug development and treatment access programmes, and supporting maternal health. DNDi’s ultimate goal is to develop new medicines to treat visceral leishmaniasis that are safe, effective, and affordable for everyone – including women during pregnancy.

Photo credit: Paul Kamau/DNDi

Gender Visceral leishmaniasis Africa

Read, watch, share

Loading...
Press releases
4 Nov 2025

European Commission invests EUR 20 million to develop urgently-needed medicines against dengue in partnership with AFD and DNDi

Woman in rural village
Publications
29 Oct 2025

Chagas Platform Newsletter N°15

Jessica Robbins
Stories
24 Oct 2025

Jessica Robbins: A long and difficult journey with cutaneous leishmaniasis

Videos
24 Oct 2025

Road to Elimination of Kala-azar in South Asia

Videos
22 Oct 2025

The Boy Who Beat the Sandfly

News
14 Oct 2025

Twenty years of the Regional Kala-azar Elimination Initiative in South Asia

Viewpoints
9 Oct 2025

Pharma’s shift away from infectious disease research could spell disaster for the world’s poorest people

STAT
News
3 Oct 2025

DNDi 2025 Projects of the Year recognize contributions of DNDi teams and partners working to deliver urgently needed innovations for people affected by Chagas disease and river blindness

VIEW ALL

Help neglected patients

To date, we have delivered thirteen new treatments, saving millions of lives.

Our goal is to deliver 25 new treatments in our first 25 years. You can help us get there. 

GIVE NOW
Linkedin-in Instagram Twitter Facebook-f Youtube
International non-profit developing safe, effective, and affordable treatments for the most neglected patients.

Learn more

  • Diseases
  • Neglected tropical diseases
  • R&D portfolio
  • Policy advocacy

Get in touch

  • Our offices
  • Contact us
  • Integrity Line

Support us

  • Donate
  • Subscribe to eNews

Work with us

  • Join research networks
  • Jobs
  • RFPs
  • Terms of Use   
  •   Acceptable Use Policy   
  •   Privacy Policy   
  •   Cookie Policy   
  •   Our policies   

  • Except for images, films, and trademarks which are subject to DNDi’s Terms of Use, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license