Fight Back Against Mosquitoes (Mosquito wars)

in #health7 years ago

 
gatesnotes   0 pointsWhat's this? Sign In Let's get started.You currently have 0 Points. You need a total of 200 points to give a bed net.Learn more about this giveaway.Earn +100 points by reading the Mosquito Wars articleGOEarn +100 points by taking the Mosquito Wars quizGOFight Back Against Mosquitoes+For our Mosquito Wars campaign, I have partnered with World Vision to distribute 100,000 bed nets to families from Inhambane province - a region in Mozambique where many people still sleep without nets. All you have to do is read the article and answer a one question quiz. Once completed, I will give a bed net to a family in need on your behalf via World Vision.You are here1. Sign UpBecome a Gates Notes Insider - sign up is quick, easy and free! Already joined? Sign in here.You are here2. Earn PointsRead the Mosquito Warsarticle and answer one question about malaria to earn points.You are here3. Give NetsOnce you earn 200 points, we will give a bed net away to a family in need on your behalf (while supplies last). You’ll also get a profile trophy to signify the gift.Congratulations!You earned 200 points, and now we’d like to give a bed net to a family in need on your behalf. Confirm your gift below.YES, give a free bed net.If you do not want us to give a bed net, please click here to close this window.Fight Back Against MosquitoesAs a Gates Notes Insider, you can participate in our Mosquito Wars bed net giveaway just by reading this article.LEARN MOREFight Back Against MosquitoesBecome a Gates Notes Insider or sign in to join our giveaway and help stop the spread of malaria.LEARN MOREMOSQUITO WEEKMOSQUITOWARSBy Bill Gates August 15, 2017Fight Back Against MosquitoesThis is a special blog post. Sign up or sign in, read the article, and take the quiz. Then I will give a bed net to a family in need through World Vision. - Bill GatesLearn more about this giveaway.

We’ve come a long way since the days of blaming the stars.Malaria has terrorized humankind for thousands of years, but for most of that time, we had no idea what caused it. The ancient Greeks thought Sirius the dog star might be responsible. A Chinese medical text from 270 BCE speculated that three demons spread the disease. As recently as the mid-1800s, doctors believed malaria was caused by the stinky fumes that wafted into cities from nearby swamps (the word malaria means “bad air” in Italian).Today, we know exactly who our enemy is: the mosquito. Doctors no longer subject malaria sufferers to unpleasant (and pointless) treatments like blood-letting and chewing tree bark. Most importantly, we’ve made massive progress in fighting a disease that as recently as 2000 killed nearly 870,000 people in a single year.This progress is one of the most remarkable global health stories in recent years. Malaria claimed more than 429,000 lives last year, mostly in Africa and Southeast Asia. While that figure is still way too high, it represents a 50 percent reduction overall from the disease’s peak in the early 2000s. I don’t throw the word “miracle” around lightly, but that number is nothing short of miraculous.How did we get here? I give credit to an unprecedented scale-up in global commitment and cooperation—malaria funding rose by 1,000 percent from 2000 to 2015. This money fueled a number of amazing scientific breakthroughs, enabled us to deliver them at scale, and focused more brainpower on improving both control and treatment efforts.This October marks a decade since Melinda and I first called for eradicating malaria. It was a controversial move at the time, but the progress made since then has convinced many that this is a realistic goal (although some are still skeptical).If I had known back in 2007 how much progress we would make in ten years, I would’ve been thrilled by how much we’ve cut the death rate. I’d also be impressed by how many insecticidal bed nets are now in use, how new treatments are helping people with the most severe cases of malaria, and how rapid diagnostic tests have made it easier to find and treat people. But it wouldn’t all be good news.In 2007, I thought we’d have a long-lasting malaria vaccine by now. The WHO plans to begin pilot demonstration projects of a first-generation malaria vaccine in sub-Saharan Africa next year, although without a booster dose it only protects a child for less than six months. I’m hopeful that researchers will develop a next generation vaccine that offers much longer protection within the next 10 years, but a decade ago I was overly optimistic about where we’d be today.There are still plenty of reasons to believe we can eradicate malaria, though. In the war against malaria and the mosquitoes who carry it, we’re already fighting on every front. Consider the wide array of innovations in development right now:

  • New Insecticide-Treated Bed Nets: The older generation of bed nets needed to be soaked in a special insecticide solution every six months. The long-lasting nets we will distribute in Mozambique through our giveaway protect people from mosquitoes for three years and can even be washed when they get dirty. Unfortunately, some mosquitoes are now developing resistance to the pyrethroid insecticides used in these nets—so researchers are working on next generation bed netsthat use combinations of insecticides and appear effective against all mosquitoes, including insecticide-resistant ones.
  • Tackling Drug Resistance: In Southeast Asia, we’ve seen some types of the malaria parasite develop resistance to the drug combinations we use to cure and prevent the disease. If this drug resistance spread to Africa, it’d be a disaster. Fortunately, we have partners on the front lines finding ways to fight back. Watch this VR video about the amazing work one team of researchers is doing to combat drug resistance in Thailand:
Sort:  

More work on malaria most especially female anopheles mosquito & aedes. good one there bro

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.16
JST 0.028
BTC 76323.20
ETH 2986.08
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.62