Malaria
in sentence
933 examples of Malaria in a sentence
With improved surveillance – and with the WHO’s regional data-sharing platform – national
malaria
programs will be better positioned to redirect resources as needed, especially in the event of an outbreak.
And, finally, the GMS countries must embrace research and development, to improve their understanding of
malaria
parasites and the mosquitoes that spread them.
The GMS must take full advantage of the opportunity it now has to eliminate
malaria.
Given that
malaria
still threatens millions of people, there is no room for delay or loss of focus.
We must build on the GMS’s remarkable progress and eliminate
malaria
once and for all.
The mortality reductions, measured in additional years of life, will be nearly equivalent to what could be expected if the world eliminated both HIV and
malaria.
The ongoing sequencing of the genomes of malaria, the tubercle bacillus, leprosy, hepatitis viruses and HIV raises serious hopes of better vaccines in the future.
They heard from health experts who said that communicable diseases were rampant and that mosquito nets would be a great way to combat
malaria.
The world could fight back with general health services in at-need areas along with more focused efforts to combat HIV and
malaria.
In low-income countries, nine million people, mostly children, die each year from infectious diseases, including malaria, diarrhea, and AIDS.
Through the SMS for Life program, an innovative public-private partnership led by Novartis, we use everyday technology, including mobile phones, text messages, and electronic-mapping technology to track weekly stock levels of
malaria
medicines at public-health facilities.
This has helped us to maintain adequate stocks, broaden access to essential medicines, and, we hope, reduce the number of
malaria
deaths in developing countries’ rural areas.
When it comes to disease, they have at times been willing to invest to slow or stop epidemics like AIDS, malaria, and Ebola, both to save lives and to prevent the diseases from coming to their own countries.
Studies like one by the World Health Organization's Commission on Macroeconomics and Health show that with an $11 trillion dollar annual national income, America could finance the control of AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and many other killer diseases for a small fraction of the money it wastes in Iraq.
Fighting
malaria
pays off at least five times the costs.
Mosquito nets and effective medication could halve the incidence of
malaria
and would cost $13 billion.
He accelerated efforts to eliminate the world’s most dangerous ancient scourge, malaria, by naming a special adviser on the disease, and by forging innovative partnerships within the UN system that have brought together private industry, foundations, and non-governmental organizations.
His campaign has already helped to reduce the incidence of
malaria.
In parts of Nigeria, a person can expect to be bitten by an infective mosquito carrying
malaria
up to 300 times in a year, while I am pretty much assured that no mosquito will give me
malaria
in Boston.
Africans suffer about 500 million cases of
malaria
per year, causing around 2 million deaths.
The rich countries should help the poor countries to overcome the burdens of their geography by helping to fund a major fight against as AIDS, malaria, and other tropical infectious diseases.
And they are alarmed by the resurgence of life-threatening diseases such as influenza, HIV, malaria, and TB.
According to the World Health Organization, “480,000 people develop multi-drug resistant TB each year, and drug resistance is starting to complicate the fight against HIV and malaria, as well.”
They die from diseases like measles, diarrhea, and
malaria
that are easy and inexpensive to treat or prevent.
Having eluded killers like
malaria
and AIDS, one should not then be killed prematurely by cancer – especially a form of cancer that could have been prevented with something as simple and as affordable as a vaccine.
Since 2000, the rate of people dying from AIDS has declined, child-killing diseases like
malaria
and measles are being tackled more effectively, universal primary education is inching forward, and the targets for safe drinking water are in sight.
This reliable funding source has spearheaded the fight on the three health-related MDGs: treating and fighting life-threatening diseases like HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis; reducing childhood mortality; and improving maternal health.
Those realities call for continuous UN action on countless fronts: combating
malaria
and AIDS, reducing maternal and child mortality, fighting global terrorism, and ensuring nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation.
Together, they represented an energetic team, convinced that if they worked hard enough, they would continue to raise resources for the hopelessly underfunded global response to AIDS, TB, and
malaria.
And even if communities voted for the “wrong” political party, they would still receive insecticide-treated bed nets to curb the deadly threat of
malaria.
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