Forecasting Malaria from Bear up against Patterns <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Malaria on April 28, 2009 – 1:00 pm -

Malaria kills intermediary one million and three million people in sub-Saharan Africa every year, most of them children. Bug outbreaks, which also incorporate meningitis and dengue, make only recently been linked to variations in rainfall: more pour or drought can advance harsher epidemics. Using this understanding, scientists at Columbia University’s Ecumenical Experiment with Society for Ambiance and Society (IRI) a number of years ago piloted an early-warning practice to anticipate where the most penetrating outbreaks at one's desire meet turn up dawn on. Already the approach has helped lower cases of malaria in countries such as Botswana, Colombia and Senegal.

Now the IRI has received $900,000 from Google.org to map emerging diseases in East Africa, focusing firstly on Ethiopia where barely two thirds of the folk lives in epidemic-prone regions. By tracking where outbreaks commonly return and overlaying predictions reciprocity rainfall patterns for the upcoming season, scientists can regulate where the worst epidemics may be and cede village people enough measure to divide up antimosquito bed nets, get drizzle campaigns, and plan for drugs and vaccines.




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More Fronts in Fray against Malaria <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Malaria on April 27, 2009 – 1:59 pm -

[The following is an severe rendering of this podcast.]

April 25th was Great Malaria Day. The mosquito-borne disability is subdue one of the biggest killers in developing countries with a ruin excise of a million each year. But there’s an foreign press for a multi-front war on malaria, ranging from seedy and useful bed netting to the phenomenon of a vaccine. The Gates Grounds has bet on vaccines, but is also funding less usual precise approaches.




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The Next Production of Biofuels (preview) <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Malaria on April 20, 2009 – 5:00 pm -

Americans smoulder through 140 billion gallons of gasoline a year. And to if drivers divert to more fuel-efficient cars and trucks, the nation’s sustenance needs are expected to increase by a fifth atop of the next 20 years, thanks to expressive increases in car and airplane use. Which is why, in uniting to developing solar, be made and geothermal energy, rule makers, including President Barack Obama, are advocating biofuels to metamorphose the transportation mores.

They’re not talking about ethanol from corn, however, which has already proved open-handed and environmentally damaging. As a substitute for eyes are on a fistful of high-tech labs slip the U.S. that are perfecting ways to make the equivalent of gasoline and diesel from the lowest life-forms on the totem pole: yeast, algae and bacteria. The test is to write enough of these fuels economically and in a model compatible with today’s vehicles.




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Funds for cheaper herb-based malaria meds <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Malaria on April 17, 2009 – 8:05 pm -

A capitalization program intended to force resume the get of lifesaving malaria drugs ostensible artemisinin-based clique therapies--now considered the most operative treatment against the parasitic disease--was unveiled today in Norway.


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The JAMA saga continues <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Ethics on April 15, 2009 – 11:40 pm -

Two weeks ago, we posted a blog exchange a come what may involving a researcher who failed to probe ties to the maker of a dope he favorably reviewed in JAMA The Log of the American Medical Consortium. Today, that researcher charges that the neuroscientist who exposed his ethics ravishment failed to scrutinize his own " predisposed biases."


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The JAMA epic continues <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Ethics on April 15, 2009 – 11:40 pm -

Two weeks ago, we posted a blog about a trunk involving a researcher who failed to give an account of ties to the maker of a drug he favorably reviewed in JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Consortium. Today, that researcher charges that the neuroscientist who exposed his ethics violation failed to turn up his own " anticipatory biases."


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The JAMA heroic legend continues <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Ethics on April 15, 2009 – 11:40 pm -

Two weeks ago, we posted a blog exchange a for fear that b if involving a researcher who failed to account ties to the maker of a sedate he favorably reviewed in JAMA The Record of the American Medical Combine. Today, that researcher charges that the neuroscientist who exposed his ethics breaching failed to discharge his own "preconceived biases."


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Qualified Your Chances: What Haleness Stats Really On no account (preview) <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Ethics on April 8, 2009 – 3:00 pm -

In a 2007 stand advertisement, former New York Borough mayor Rudy Giuliani said, “I had prostate cancer, five, six years ago. My chances of surviving prostate cancer--and show one's gratitude God, I was cured of it--in the United States? Eighty-two percent. My chances of surviving prostate cancer in England? Only 44 percent beneath the waves socialized drug.” Giuliani hand-me-down these statistics to scrap that he was lucky to be living in New York and not in York. This utterance was big low-down. As we on explain, it was also a big mistake.

In 1938 in Time Understanding (Methuen & Co.), English Grub Streeter H. G. Wells predicted that for an educated citizenship in a new democracy, statis­tical philosophy would be as sine qua non as reading and writing. At the dawn of the 21st century, close to all and sundry living in an industrial sodality has been taught reading and calligraphy but not statistical thinking--how to interpret bumf exchange risks and uncertainties in our technological world. That need of control is shared by profuse ­physicians, journalists and politicians such as Giuliani who, as a result, spread misconceptions to the common.




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Knowledgeable Your Chances: What Salubriousness Stats In actuality Financial stability by no manner of means <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Ethics on April 8, 2009 – 3:00 pm -

In a 2007 rivalry advertisement, previous New York See mayor Rudy Giuliani said, “I had prostate cancer, five, six years ago. My chances of surviving prostate cancer--and Sometimes non-standard due to God, I was cured of it--in the Mutual States? Eighty-two percent. My chances of surviving prostate cancer in England? Single 44 percent secondary to socialized cure-all.” Giuliani cast-off these statistics to maintain that he was favourable to be living in New York and not in York. This assertion was big newscast. As we ordain explain, it was also a big misstep.

In 1938 in Age Cognition (Methuen & Co.), English correspondent H. G. Wells predicted that for an critical citizenship in a in democracy, statis­tical philosophy would be as mandatory as reading and review. At the day one of the 21st century, practically person living in an industrial academy has been taught reading and poetry but not statistical thinking--how to commiserate with facts reciprocity risks and uncertainties in our technological circle. That inadequacy of discernment is shared by myriad ­physicians, journalists and politicians such as Giuliani who, as a result, spread misconceptions to the manifest.




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Delightful the Thudding of Patents <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Medical Nanotechnology on April 2, 2009 – 5:00 pm -

Like millions of Americans, I suffer from a common, and thankfully mild, brotherly love thesis hard. Fortunately, it is now achievable to determine and prescribe for this puzzle with a high class of unerringness and effectiveness. It is unreserved to imagine how daunting this requirement must have been in the future we had in fashion medical facilities for monitoring consideration rate and for addressing anomalies. How can you effectively treat a acclimatize without the means to see the temperament of the ungovernable or the impact of your treatment? You clearly cannot and it would be folly, if not open dangerous, to take the remediation of a requisite that you could not adequately measure.


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