Malaria parasites 'resist drugs'
International scientists say they have found the first evidence of resistance to the world's most effective drug for treating malaria.
They say the trend in western Cambodia has to be urgently contained because full-blown resistance would be a global health catastrophe.
Drugs are taking longer to clear blood of malaria parasites than before.
http://news.bbc.co.u...fic/8073118.stm
Page 1 of 1
Malaria parasites 'resist drugs' in Western Cambodia Fake drugs contributing to the problem
#2
Posted 30 May 2009 - 12:27 PM
Malaria - same as dengu Fever - is transmitted by mosquitos.
Medicine is fine, but the first what has to be done is to kill these mosquitos and clean up places where they are breeding.
No mosquitos, no malaria - easy.
Ask Singapore - any small amount of water in your flower pot and you get a fine, any open water-tank etc. and you get a fine.
And then look in the Philippines, and see all the garbage around, and about the presence of malaria and dengue fever even in the big cities, I am not surprised.
Pharma industry is looking only for profit concerning medicine. It's OK if you get it from mosquitos. But the best solution about malaria and dengue fever is not to get it at all, because there are no mosquitos - clean up garbage, clean up water drainages, clean up toilet, use mosquito nets, so the cannot enter etc ...
You might use some mosquito poison to kill these mosquitos, which still survive...but mosquitos are gone away, if they cannot find a place to breed, and mosquitos cannot transmit malaria, if they are not moving on between infected and not infected humans.
Medicine is fine, but the first what has to be done is to kill these mosquitos and clean up places where they are breeding.
No mosquitos, no malaria - easy.
Ask Singapore - any small amount of water in your flower pot and you get a fine, any open water-tank etc. and you get a fine.
And then look in the Philippines, and see all the garbage around, and about the presence of malaria and dengue fever even in the big cities, I am not surprised.
Pharma industry is looking only for profit concerning medicine. It's OK if you get it from mosquitos. But the best solution about malaria and dengue fever is not to get it at all, because there are no mosquitos - clean up garbage, clean up water drainages, clean up toilet, use mosquito nets, so the cannot enter etc ...
You might use some mosquito poison to kill these mosquitos, which still survive...but mosquitos are gone away, if they cannot find a place to breed, and mosquitos cannot transmit malaria, if they are not moving on between infected and not infected humans.
Share this topic:
Page 1 of 1

Help











