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Medicine News

Egypt Declared Malaria-Free After Century of Work To Defeat Disease (semafor.com) 36

Egypt was declared malaria-free by the World Health Organization, after nearly a century of work to eradicate the disease in the country. From a report: Egypt saw 3 million cases a year in the 1940s, and the Aswan Dam's development in the 1960s created new bodies of standing water for the mosquitoes to breed in, but by 2001 the disease was "firmly under control," according to the WHO. "The disease that plagued pharaohs now belongs to [Egypt's] history," the WHO's chief said. It's the 44th country to be certified, but the wider battle against malaria goes on: The mosquito-borne disease still kills around 600,000 people a year, the large majority of them children in sub-Saharan Africa.
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Egypt Declared Malaria-Free After Century of Work To Defeat Disease

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  • by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Monday October 21, 2024 @10:27AM (#64881263)
    We have measles, polio, tetanus increasing year-over-year, with no end in sight.
    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      Because of the "vaXXINes are teh 3VIL!!!!" crowd.

    • But sooner or later it's not on you to shield them from Darwin. If they're determined to believe that medical science is a Communist conspiracy to pollute their "pure white Christian essence," you have to let them test that idea, and endure your laughter when they finally confront reality.
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        But sooner or later it's not on you to shield them from Darwin. If they're determined to believe that medical science is a Communist conspiracy to pollute their "pure white Christian essence," you have to let them test that idea, and endure your laughter when they finally confront reality.

        That would be fine, however those diseases are highly contagious. If you aren't up to date on your vaccinations, or you never received a full vaccination (I believe MMR is now 2 doses, even though for a huge part it was a

        • All true. Not a lot of great options available to deal with the laziness and stupidity of anti-vax people. Can't let them endanger the public, but also can't go down the route of treating people's bodies like public property (which is what the anti-abortionists do). Seems like current means are the only viable thing: Bar them from certain things so the danger they pose is reduced, but their choices remain theirs.
        • by jonadab ( 583620 )
          Tetanus is technically communicable, but not in the same "you can catch it from being in the same room as someone who's got it" way as the others. In practice, almost all tetanus infections result from getting environmental crud in an open wound. And the virus doesn't need human hosts to stay alive; it is naturally present in the soil all over the world. So I am not worried about tetanus epidemics, and if people don't want to get the tetanus vaccine, I say warn them and then let them do what they want.

          Po
    • Who says you are first world you went from barbarism back to barbarism without ever passing through civilised first,
  • Aedes aegypti is a vector for transmitting numerous pathogens. According to the Walter Reed Biosystematics Units as of 2022, it is associated with the following 54 viruses and 2 species of Plasmodium (versions of the malaria parasite): Aino virus (AINOV), African horse sickness virus (AHSV), Bozo virus (BOZOV), Bussuquara virus (BSQV), Bunyamwera virus (BUNV), Catu virus (CATUV), Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), Chandipura vesiculovirus (CHPV), Cypovirus (unnamed), Cache Valley virus (CVV), Dengue virus (DENV), E

    • Uh, who names a virus Bozo virus? How is a doctor supposed to tell a patient he has that?

      • Clowns.

      • Uh, who names a virus Bozo virus? How is a doctor supposed to tell a patient he has that?

        They named it that because the symptoms include: Balding head, pale skin, swollen nose, inflamed lips, changes in hair color, and acutely enlarged feet.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        In French, Sango, or one of the local languages, presumably. The virus is named for the village of Bozo in the Central African Republic, near where it was discovered.

        • Which is also one of the reasons that, for some decades now, the standard practice has to NOT name viruses (bacteria, worms, whatever) after geographical or cultural units.

          One of these days, I'm going to go on a holiday to Marburg (Germany) and Ebola (D.Rep.Congo) via ... well, probably Bozo.

  • Just kill them by releasing sterile males into the environment, rinse and repeat.

  • by CEC-P ( 10248912 ) on Monday October 21, 2024 @01:37PM (#64881791)
    They had the largest avian flu (human infections) outbreak ever in 2015 but the cases hit zero around 2018 and have been ever since. So that's good too.
  • will be trying to re-introduce it, to ensure that their evil, malicious, sadistic god's will be done.
    • Don't forget the Jesus Returning Accelerators. There are enough loonytoons in the world to try to pull something like this off, resulting in a very high body count.
    • by jonadab ( 583620 )
      In that case, why settle for malaria? Surely someone can figure out a way to get their hands on a viable sample of smallpox... say, isn't it gene sequenced? Couldn't we just download the sequence and synthesize it?
      • You're giving them ideas.

        One of the things that makes them so comical is that they're incapable of coming up with ideas for themselves - that has been bred out of them by generations of inadequate parents. And you're giving them ideas?

        Bad move.

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