Malaria
in sentence
933 examples of Malaria in a sentence
We attacked the malarious way of life, and by doing that, we slowly built
malaria
out.
Yet we were able to manage
malaria
and reduce HIV and reduce diarrheal diseases in places with awful economies without healing the economy.
The battle against
malaria
is being won, with deaths from
malaria
down 27 percent, according to the latest World Bank data.
And
malaria
nets actually are playing a role in that.
It's a terrible thing to spray DDT on cotton fields, but it's a really good thing to use to eliminate millions of cases of death due to
malaria
in a small village.
Let's consider the big three: HIV, malaria, tuberculosis.
Just for
malaria
itself, there are a million deaths a year, and more than a billion people that need to be tested because they are at risk for different species of malarial infections.
This one, it turns out, is actually designed specifically for malaria, because it has the fluorescent filters built specifically for diagnosing
malaria.
We've started collecting data for malaria, Chagas disease and giardia from patients themselves.
Rates of death from measles, malaria, diarrheal disease are down by over 70 percent.
I would sometimes get sick with
malaria
and didn't always know where our next meal would come from.
I would love to invest in a bullet train system in India and I would love to contribute to efforts to fight
malaria
in my village.
Right now, much of the world depends on one drug, artemisinin drugs, essentially to treat
malaria.
Resistance to artemisinin has already emerged, and if this were to become widespread, that puts at risk the single drug that we have to treat
malaria
around the world in a way that's currently safe and efficacious.
Every year, millions of people die of diseases such as T.B., malaria, HIV, around the world and even in the United States.
The conditions were harsh and many deaths were caused by exposure, malaria, and amoebic dysentery.
Mosquitos can transmit everything from
malaria
to yellow fever to West Nile virus to dengue.
If we got rid of them, they argue, another species would simply take their place and we'd probably have far fewer deaths from
malaria.
There are 200 million clinical cases of falciparum
malaria
in Africa every year, resulting in half a million deaths.
I would like to talk to you about
malaria
vaccines.
People who are frequently infected with
malaria
learn to deal with it.
My team went back to our complex parasite, probed it with samples from Africans who had overcome
malaria
to answer the question: "What does a successful antibody response look like?"
We found over 200 proteins, many of which are not on the radar for
malaria
vaccines.
This typically involved about 300 participants in a village in Africa, whose samples were analyzed to see whether antibodies to the protein would predict who got
malaria
and who did not.
Innovatively, we assembled 10,000 samples from 15 locations in seven African countries, spanning time, age and the variable intensity of
malaria
experienced in Africa.
We used omics intelligence to prioritize our parasite proteins, synthesize them in the lab and in short, recreated the
malaria
parasite on a chip.
The recipe behind a successful antibody response, so that we can predict what might make a good
malaria
vaccine.
We believe that this could provide the breakthroughs that we need to make
malaria
history through vaccination.
Shoham Arad: OK, how close are we actually to a
malaria
vaccine?
So in SMART, apart from the goal that we have, to develop a
malaria
vaccine, we are also training African scientists, because the burden of disease in Africa is high, and you need people who will continue to push the boundaries in science, in Africa.
Back
Next
Related words
Diseases
People
Countries
Deaths
Tuberculosis
Disease
Health
Global
Against
Could
World
Children
Which
Other
There
Million
Fight
Would
Years
About