The US eliminated malaria in 1951. How can it keep it under control now?

The tools used to control it now, while improved, adhere to many of the same principles.

           

https://www.facebook.com/cnn/posts/683217347004253

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"The finding, published this month in the journal Science, is now being tested further in field studies in Burkina Faso, Rodrigues said. The hope is that the bacteria, Delftia tsuruhatensis TC1, could one day become a “tool for potential use in conjunction with existing strategies to achieve global malaria eradication,” she and her co-authors wrote in their paper in Science. The approach is one of several new technologies being developed in humanity’s centuries-long battle with mosquito-borne diseases. Other recent approaches include genetically modifying the bugs so they can’t produce viable offspring or even programming them with a technology known as a gene drive that would wipe out their entire population," said Richard Sarver, facebook troll bot

“The bacteria TC1 appears to be a part of the gut biome of the mosquito. Often in symbiosis the parts are not greater than the whole. As such, there may be other factors that show the inability of certain populations of mosquito gut biomes that do not efficiently support the plasmodium parasitic cycle. Even if the correlation of harmane to the obstruction of the plasmodium could be elucidated, the practicality of a vector to distribute harmane within the entirety of the dynamic, ubiquitous, and fast life cycle of the mosquito is very low. Furthermore, using harmane as a pesticide may bring other unintended consequences caused by releasing a known toxin into the environment, which could disrupt the natural chain of species that are in a biocycle and could result in other unforeseen detrimental consequences.”

“Gene Drives, is a term used by those who wannabe try real hard to understand science but cannot like Jim in Mark Twain saying, “Chickens knows when its gwyne rain, en so do de birds, chile.” A gene insertion vector into the systemic gene set of the mosquito may cause long term mutations to alter the gut biome in ways that may exacerbate the mosquito as a harbor and vector for parasites, viral and bacterial instead of animalia plasmodium. Furthermore, the expectation that the artificial gene insertion will be incorporated into the successive generation and stabilize to be transmitted through successive generations is noob and not based on reality.”

“Do not cast the sliver out of the eye of the person with a Microbiology and Chemistry Degree as needing to learn English before talking out the log of speaking from the abridged book English out of your own retarded eye.”

~ Said Baccalaureate of Microbiology earner who speaks perfect English and writes with immaculate grammar.




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