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08 November 2009
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Full Coverage: Malaria

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11.07.2009 Three reasons why malaria is about to get worse: climate change, loss of predator species and failure of drugs. Global Health
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Related topics/regions: [Biodiversity] [Climate change]
 Inside the mosquito net / Photo credit: Reuters
25.04.2008 On World Malaria Day, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is due to announce a global initiative to fight against the vector-borne disease that kills a million people around the world every year. In India, malaria is spreading to newer areas owing largely to a changing climate.
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Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Climate change] [Health] [Disease]
Image: Inside the mosquito net / Photo credit: Reuters
02.04.2008 The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis & Malaria (GFATM) has launched its Round 8 funding to scale up health systems across the world. The India – Country Coordinating Mechanism for the GFATM invites proposals from government agencies, civil society networks and private sector for receiving grants.
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Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Health] [AIDS] [Disease] [Civil society]
28.11.2007 A new report by Oxfam says that more than 85% people in the world have no access to medicines due to high pricing. Developing medicines only for the rich is a bad business strategy, as also the scant interest shown by pharmaceutical companies in research and development of medicines for diseases that affect the poor in developing countries, says the report.
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Related topics/regions: [Health] [AIDS] [Disease]
14.12.2006 An international fund said on Wednesday it had greatly expanded malaria prevention and treatment efforts this year that have helped beat back the disease in pockets of Africa, but much more needs to be done.
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Related topics/regions: [Health] [Disease]
06.10.2006
The United Nations-backed Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is expected to approve requests from almost 100 countries for $950 million over two years to support programmes to combat the global scourges that kill over 6 million people annually.
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Related topics/regions: [International cooperation] [Health] [AIDS] [Disease] [United Nations] [MDGs]
04.07.2006
Getting insecticide-treated bednets to those who need them is just the first step.



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From: CORE Group
05.05.2006
 BATTLING THE DISEASE: Malaria patients at the Civil Hospital in North Lakhimpur
BATTLING THE DISEASE: Malaria patients at the Civil Hospital in North Lakhimpur
Death toll in the State could be 500, say health officials
In the absence of blood slide test, official figure is low
Civil hospital is chock-a-block
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Related topics/regions: [India] [Health] [Disease] [MDGs]
05.04.2006 The Indian government has formed the National Council on AIDS to mainstream HIV/AIDS into the ongoing activities and programmes of all government departments. It also plans to formulate new policies and strategies with ecological safeguards to take on dengue and malaria.
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Related topics/regions: [India] [AIDS] [Disease] [Governance]
Low-tech solutions can survive infrastructure breakdowns and can withstand times of conflict.
16.02.2006 Simple, inexpensive and community based solutions are yielding big rewards in a country with the highest child and maternal mortality rates in the world. Programs that focus on local participation, education and integrated approaches to improving healthcare are giving people the tools needed to treat and prevent the biggest killers: malaria, diarrhea and pneumonia.
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From: Global Health Council
Related topics/regions: [Sierra Leone] [Aid] [Children] [Disease] [Infant mortality] [Gender] [Conflict resolution]
Image: Low-tech solutions can survive infrastructure breakdowns and can withstand times of conflict. © Human Rights Watch
30.01.2006 At the World Economic Forum Meeting on Wednesday, Bono unveiled plans for a new brand of products known as Product Red. With companies including American Express, Converse, Giorgio Armani, and Gap on board, profits will go directly to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
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From: kaisernetwork.org (Kaiser Family Foundation)
Related topics/regions: [Business] [Consumption] [Corporations] [AIDS]
20.01.2006 The World Health Organization has asked pharmaceutical companies to end the marketing and sale of “single-drug” artemisinin malaria medicines, in order to prevent resistance developing to the drug.
* WHO warning angers pharmaceutical bosses
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Related topics/regions: [United Nations]
17.01.2006 Children at risk of malaria are more likely to die of the disease if they are given dietary supplements of iron and folic acid, according to a new study.
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From: SciDev.Net
Related topics/regions: [Children]
02.11.2005 Kathmandu: Large chunk of a fund of over $11 million pledged by the Geneva-based Global Fund to Fight Against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM) is on the verge of freezing if the agencies concerned do not enhance their capacity in their fight against the dreaded disease
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Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Nepal] [Health] [AIDS]
06.10.2005 All the commitments made by both donors and African countries to lift the continent out of poverty will be consolidated into one action plan and monitored on an annual basis, the Department for International Development announced.
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From: Guardian Unlimited
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Aid] [AIDS] [Democracy]
23.09.2005 A new process will allow mosquito nets to be treated with insecticide en masse in the factory, keeping the nets effective against malaria for over 20 washes. Most importantly, the process can be reproduced by other companies that make long-lasting insecticide treated nets, which are in short supply in Africa.
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From: Academy for Educational Development
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Thailand] [Science]
03.08.2005 The devastating Tsunami of December 2004 has created new breeding grounds for a malarial mosquito by flooding fields in the Andaman Islands with saltwater, say researchers.
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From: SciDev.Net
Related topics/regions: [Asia and the Pacific] [Environment]
The plant 'Artemisia annua' is used in medicines that treat malaria.
30.06.2005 At a Beijing meeting last week, UN special advisor Jeffrey Sachs asked China to take the lead in the fight against malaria. By cultivating a shrub that produces an anti–malarial medicine, China could make major contributions to reduce global poverty and meet the U.N. Millennium Development Goals.
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From: SciDev.Net
Related topics/regions: [China] [Poverty] [Health] [Disease] [United Nations] [MDGs]
Image: The plant 'Artemisia annua' is used in medicines that treat malaria. © SciDev.Net
Killing the Messenger
13.06.2005 A scientific breakthrough from an international team of researchers is being described as "a very important contribution to the arsenal of existing methods to combat malaria." The new method could reduce the transfer of the disease by up to 98 percent and can be cheaply produced, giving hope to developing countries where the disease is endemic.
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From: Radio Netherlands Wereldomroep
Related topics/regions: [Health]
Image: Killing the Messenger © Fundación Chandra
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