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Passenger screening advised to cut risk of importing drug-resistant malaria to AfricaImported resistance has rendered ineffective the two affordable malaria drugs
which have been the mainstay of malaria treatment in Africa for forty years,
according to experts writing today in the journal Science. Dr. Cally Roper of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the lead author of the article, comments: 'Several replacement treatments are already compromised by the emergence of resistance in Asia. We suggest that careful thought should be given to preventing further import of resistant parasites, perhaps by the screening and treatment of passengers travelling from South East Asia or South America to Africa. 'The widespread introduction of artemisinin-based combination therapy could also help to minimise the rate at which resistant parasites can spread. Most importantly, these data demonstrate that antimalarial drug resistance is an international problem that requires a co-ordinated, international response'. - EurekAlert Related articles:
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