World Malaria Day is celebrating on April 25, an effort towards
spreading awareness about malaria and its prevention, Dr Rajkumar
Chaudhary, Secretary, Association of Hospitals, says, “A continuing
theme from last year is Invest in the Future, defeat malaria a part of
the WHO initiative, holds the limelight for this year’s World Malaria
day. The aim is to completely irradiate the ailment even if the number
of cases is reducing year by year, a lack of awareness and preventive
measures is still a major cause for concern. Improved awareness
initiative programmes, will help to control this fatal disease. The
nature of the disease is as such that is difficult to detect, and is not
picked up in the first two blood samples. Due to this, there are
several cases of patients landing in hospitals with lung, heart, liver
problems.
Mumbai is a hotspot of vector-borne diseases owing to its unique environment and demographics. Mumbai is densely packed slums and these areas are always disproportionally impacted. Although the infection rates are high, many people cannot afford anti-malarial drugs, repellent or use mosquito nets. A major chunk of these individuals live below the poverty line and are unable to procure sufficient amenities to protect themselves and their families against Malaria”
The symptoms start around 7-10 days after being bitten by a carrier mosquito. The patient feels fatigued, has bouts of fever every few hours, shivers even when the outside temperature is normal, and suffers from headache, diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting. If immune system is weak, the symptoms may get triggered sooner than usual.
Mumbai is a hotspot of vector-borne diseases owing to its unique environment and demographics. Mumbai is densely packed slums and these areas are always disproportionally impacted. Although the infection rates are high, many people cannot afford anti-malarial drugs, repellent or use mosquito nets. A major chunk of these individuals live below the poverty line and are unable to procure sufficient amenities to protect themselves and their families against Malaria”
The symptoms start around 7-10 days after being bitten by a carrier mosquito. The patient feels fatigued, has bouts of fever every few hours, shivers even when the outside temperature is normal, and suffers from headache, diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting. If immune system is weak, the symptoms may get triggered sooner than usual.
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