Malaria: current status of control, diagnosis, treatment, and a proposed agenda for research and development
The Lancet Infectious Diseases 2(9): 564-573
Article 2002 English
Authors
PG
Philippe J. Guérin
PO
Piero Olliaro
FN
François Nosten
Abstract
1 min read
Rolling back malaria is possible. Tools are available but they are not used. Several countries deploy, as their national malaria control treatment policy, drugs that are no longer effective. New and innovative methods of vector control, diagnosis, and treatment should be developed, and work towards development of new drugs and a vaccine should receive much greater support. But the pressing need, in the face of increasing global mortality and general lack of progress in malaria control, is research into the best methods of deploying and using existing approaches, particularly insecticidetreated mosquito nets, rapid methods of diagnosis, and artemisinin-based combination treatments. Evidence on these approaches should provide national governments and international donors with the costbenefit information that would justify much-needed increases in global support for appropriate and effective malaria control.
Lindsey R. Baden, Flaminia Catteruccia, Abdoulaye Diabaté, Cristina Donini, François Nosten, Scott L. O’Neill, Faith Osier, Aung Pyae Phyo, Sir Nicholas White
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