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18/11/2008
Aids drugs side effects probed
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05/11/2008
Aids foundation calls for action from Obama
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17/11/2008
Aids testing encouraged in India
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04/11/2008
Asian countries pool data to fight flu
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13/11/2008
No sign of HIV in transplant patient
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10/11/2008
Bird flu found in northern Thailand
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18/11/2008
Calculating malaria drug demand 'crucial'
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05/11/2008
Call for universal vaccine
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11/11/2008
Chinese herbal therapy used to help fight HIV
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14/11/2008
Cholera cases triple in DR Congo
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12/11/2008
Commercial poultry 'more vulnerable' to flu
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12/11/2008
Drug resistant TB rare in US
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03/11/2008
Early vaccines 'ward against whooping cough'
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13/11/2008
Fear of increase in airport malaria in US
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04/11/2008
Fears over spread of HIV among families
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03/11/2008
Flu jab works despite irregularities
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06/11/2008
Food shortages obstruct HIV/Aids treatment
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11/11/2008
Global Fund approves $2.75bn
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06/11/2008
Growing resistance to TB meds
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13/11/2008
Indonesia denies bird flu death
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06/11/2008
Malawi gets $20m Aids grant
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17/11/2008
Malaysia bans poultry from Thailand
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18/11/2008
Meeting malaria targets 'unlikely'
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14/11/2008
Nasal vaccine for bird flu moves forward
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05/11/2008
Nigeria opts for in-house drugs
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17/11/2008
Old British law 'an obstacle' to fight against Aids
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07/11/2008
Poor bank cooperation stymies international aid
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10/11/2008
Scientists engineer HIV assassin cells
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07/11/2008
South Africa aims for 80 per cent treatment rate
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14/11/2008
South Africa tackles Aids drugs shortages
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03/11/2008
Study discovers bacterial pathway
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07/11/2008
Threat of HIV/Aids from rapes in the DR Congo
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12/11/2008
US donates $44.4m to tackle bird flu
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04/11/2008
Vietnam on dengue alert after flooding
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10/11/2008
Zimbabwe bank gives back aid cash
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11/11/2008
Zimbabwean health system receives funding
Global malaria map revealed by Oxford Uni
Over a third of the world's population lives in an area where there is a risk of deadly malaria.
According to a new spatial map of global malaria risk over the last 40 years, produced by researchers at Oxford University, 2.37 billion people were at risk of contracting the deadliest human malaria parasite, P falciparum malaria, last year.
However, the Malaria Atlas Project (MAP) found that one billion people were living under a much lower risk of infection than was previously assumed.
"At a time when donors and international agencies are spending more money on malaria control and re-considering the prospects of malaria elimination, it is critical to have a map of where the disease risks exist. Such a map has been conspicuous by its absence for 40 years," said Professor Bob Snow, who led the MAP team.
"Our recent work is the first of its kind, and it should guide where investment should continue to increase, and where elimination may be possible."
The study was conducted n conjunction with the Kenyan Medical Research Institute.
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