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Health: Infectious diseases

Features

Here is a list of the latest articles

Can India deliver affordable TB diagnostics?

India has a heavy TB burden but has the technological capacity to deal with it. T.V. Padma reports.

3 November 2011 | EN

Chagas disease: neglected no more?

Researchers are stepping up efforts to finding new treatments for Chagas disease, with three drug candidates in clinical trials.

Source: Science

6 September 2011 | EN | ES

Daya Bay nuclear power plant

China urged to take technological risk more seriously

The recent nuclear scare in Japan has reinforced pressure in China to raise its awareness of the risks of new technologies. Li Jiao reports.

12 August 2011 | EN | 中文

Speeding dengue vaccine to the developing world

New vaccines normally take years to reach developing countries, but the WHO hopes it can shorten the time drastically for dengue vaccine.

Source: Bulletin of the WHO

21 July 2011 | EN | 中文

Mosquitoes overcoming best defence against malaria

Mosquitoes are growing resistant to pyrethroids, the only WHO-approved insecticides used in bednets.

Source: Nature

12 July 2011 | EN

Counterfeit drugs: Facts & figures

Priya Shetty explores the tools and partnerships that help the public health community counter the threat of counterfeit medicines.

30 March 2011 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Girl gets a TB vaccine in South Africa

TB vaccines: getting them out of the lab

New TB vaccines are facing a major funding shortfall, says Mićo Tatalović, and some countries seem resistant to accepting a future vaccine.

24 March 2011 | EN | ES

Jar collecting date palm sap

A sweet solution to Nipah virus transmission?

Scientists say that Bangladesh's Nipah virus could be stopped by protecting the date palm sap that its fruit bat carriers enjoy.

Source: Science

11 March 2011 | EN

Girl receiving oral polio vaccine

Disease eradication: where are we at now?

Thirty years since the eradication of smallpox, we are yet to beat polio and malaria, and scientists are discussing new courses of action.

Source: Science

14 January 2011 | EN

Nanotechnology for health: Facts and figures

Can developing countries use nanotechnology to improve health? Priya Shetty looks at nanomedicine's promise.

24 November 2010 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Case study: South Africa uses nanotech against TB

South Africa is using nanotechnology to improve existing tuberculosis drugs. Munyaradzi Makoni looks at a developing country's experience.

24 November 2010 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Pills

Exciting HIV prevention methods on the horizon

A microbicide gel showed promise for the first time this year, but a range of HIV prevention could hit shelves in the next few years.

Source: The New York Times

18 November 2010 | EN | ES | 中文

Glow in the dark mosquitoes

Will GM mosquitoes end dengue and malaria?

While great advances have been made in the lab, GM mosquitoes are still a long way from being airborne, reports Katherine Nightingale.

5 August 2010 | EN | ES

Prospects brighten for HIV/AIDS treatments

A successful vaccine trial, new drugs, and improved understanding have given new hope to the HIV/AIDS research community.

Source: Nature

16 July 2010 | EN | ES | 中文

Cupping in China

Integrating modern and traditional medicine: Facts and figures

Traditional and modern medicine have much to offer each other despite their differences. Priya Shetty assesses an uneasy relationship.

30 June 2010 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

The challenge of improving nutrition: Facts and figures

A healthy diet is more than just calories. Priya Shetty gets the figures on the cost of poor nutrition — and the scale of the challenge.

20 January 2010 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Mexican scientists reflect on swine flu lessons

University scientists say they were under-used during the flu crisis because of a poor relationship with government laboratories.

Source: Cell

15 January 2010 | EN | ES

Climate change and insect-borne disease: Facts and figures

Priya Shetty explains the links between climate change and insect-borne disease, and outlines priorities for developing country policymakers.

9 September 2009 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Climate complexities stoke disease controversies

Modelling how climate change might affect insect-borne disease is hugely complex — and increasingly controversial, explains Justine Davies.

9 September 2009 | EN | ES | FR | 中文

Back to basics in HIV research

Many HIV vaccines and microbicides have failed clinical trials and HIV researchers say the field needs to get back to basics.

Source: Nature Medicine

28 August 2009 | EN | 中文