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41 Stories on Malaria
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Time.com: Genetic Variant Raises HIV Risk

Researchers discover a genetic variant found almost exclusively in people of African descent that may increase the chances of developing AIDS

Time.com: Malaria-Fighting Mosquitoes to Come?

In a cramped, humid laboratory in London, mosquitoes swarming in stacked, net-covered cages are being scrutinized for keys to controlling malaria

Quotes of the day: Adelegan

Nowhere is the need for cheaper, renewable energy more apparent than Africa. There, the poorest villagers huddle around candles because even kerosene is too expensive.

Some aid delivered in cyclone-ravaged Myanmar

The United Nations and the Red Cross began distributing relief supplies Tuesday to people affected by the devastating cyclone that killed at least 22,000 people in Myanmar on Friday.

Time.com: WHO: Climate Change Worst on Poor

Millions of people could face poverty, disease and hunger as a result of climate change, which is expected to hit poor countries the hardest, the World Health Organization warned

Time.com: Can Climate Change Make Us Sicker?

Climate change means more than warming at the poles. It can intensify disease and famine and endanger human health

Fortune: Solving the highway death epidemic

If you are a hammer, as the saying goes, everything looks like a nail. If you are the World Health Organization, everything looks like a disease - even traffic accidents.

Ted Turner to help raise millions to fight malaria in Africa

Ted Turner is working with Lutheran and United Methodist organizations to raise $200 million to fight malaria in Africa, the CNN founder announced Tuesday.

Fortune: A new approach to an old disease

Charles Kimando, a doctor in Kenya, has long been frustrated with his limited arsenal of drugs to treat malaria. The parasitic disease makes its appearance after heavy rains in Embu, the central Kenyan town where he is based. Kimando has access to a drug called Arsucam, but it treats malaria with two different pills, one of which tastes terrible and sometimes has side effects. "It can be hard to get people to take the available drugs," he says.

Bush tours Rwandan genocide memorial

President Bush walked somberly through a memorial where 250,000 Rwandans killed in the 1994 genocidal slaughter are buried, emerging to call it "a moving place that can't help but shake your emotions to the very foundation."

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