- Bevy of Malaria-Sites Zoom In on Stats, Scratches, Bites,the cambodia daily
Just when you thought you had it all on malaria, the World Wide Web seems able to
dish up so much more. From the latest information on malaria research to
travel tips to just plain mosquito silliness, a quick surf on the
Internet turns up a bevy of sites devoted to the mosquito-borne disease.
The World Health Organization estimates there are 300 million to
500 million cases of malaria annually; about 1.5 million to 2.7 million
people die. In Cambodia, about 170,000 people contracted the disease in 1997,
the Ministry of Health estimates. Although 800 people are recorded to
have died from the disease in health care centers, health experts believe
the number is much higher. Travelers seeking information on how to avoid the deadly
disease and where malarial regions are can look up information from some of the world's
most eminent health organizations.
On the Web site of the US Center for Disease Control
(www.cdc.gov/ncidod/publications/brochures/malaria.htm),
travelers can look up basic information about the disease, find out about anti-malarial drugs and their side effects,
and learn about self-treatment measures if they get malaria in a remote area
before they can get to a doctor. The WHO Web site of its Division of Control of Tropical
Diseases
(www.who.int/ctd/html/malaria.html) has information for travelers, including a map
of where malaria cases tend to occur. The page boasts a link containing frequently asked
questions about malaria as well as explanations of the global strategies to eradicate the
disease. Web sites describing how the development of a possible malaria vaccine is going are
also prolific. The US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases web page
(www.niaid.nih.gov/factsheets/malariares.htm) outlines how an estimated $22.8 million is
being used to research the disease. Then, in the classic style of the sometimes-too-random
Web, there are a number of web sites dedicated to the mosquito. One of the better ones is
funded by the US National Science Foundation. Mosquito Bytes
(why files.news.wisc.edu/016skeeter/index.html) includes large down-loadable photos of the
bloodsuckers and fact sheets on malaria. The site also includes a whine-page where people can
offer their worst skeeter-nightmare. Skeeter is an American slang term for mosquitoes. The Cambodia Daily's Web site
(www.cambodia.net/malaria) keeps track of donations for
an ongoing campaign to purchase mosquito nets for Cambodia's rural poor.