Malaria Open Access Journals

Malaria is a disease caused by a parasite. The parasite is transmitted to humans through the bites of infected mosquitoes. People who have malaria usually feel very sick, with a high fever and shaking chills. Each year, approximately 210 million people are infected with malaria, and about 440,000 people die from the disease. Most of the people who die from the disease are young children in Africa. While the illness is remarkable in calm atmospheres, jungle fever is as yet normal in tropical and subtropical nations. World wellbeing authorities are attempting to lessen the frequency of jungle fever by appropriating bed nets to help shield individuals from mosquito chomps as they rest. Researchers around the globe are attempting to build up an antibody to forestall jungle fever.   In case you're making a trip to areas where intestinal sickness is normal, find a way to forestall mosquito nibbles by wearing defensive apparel, utilizing bug repellants and dozing under rewarded mosquito nets. Contingent upon the zone you are visiting and your individual hazard factors for disease, you may likewise need to take preventive medication previously, during and after your outing. Numerous intestinal sickness parasites are presently impervious to the most widely recognized medications used to treat the infection.

High Impact List of Articles

Relevant Topics in General Science