Scientists Close to Creating Single-dose CureĀ for All Strains of Malaria
Scientists believe they are close to creating a single-dose cure for all strains of malaria.
A team from the University of Cape Town said a recently discovered compound, called MMV390048, may also be able to block transmission of the parasite from person to person.
Conventional multidrug malaria treatments only work for a short period of time as the malaria parasite becomes resistant to them. Read MoreThousands of people could be at risk from a deadly virus in California's Yosemite National Park that has already claimed two lives, officials say.
Four other cases of Hantavirus, a rare lung disease, have been reported.
The park said it is getting about 1,000 calls per day from frightened visitors on its Hantavirus hotline. Read MoreDaniella Brand Mangoes Recalled in U.S.; 105 Sickened in 16 States
An ongoing salmonella outbreak traced to mangoes has sickened at least 105 people in 16 states across the U.S.
There have been 25 hospitalizations but no deaths. People who fell ill after Aug. 6 may not have been reported. In Canada, where health authorities first identified the outbreak, there have also been several cases.
Splendid Products has recalled the mangoes, sold under the Daniella brand name. The recall applies only to mangoes with stickers bearing PLU numbers 3114, 4051, 4311, 4584, or 4959. These mangoes, and mangoes without stickers, should be thrown out. Read MoreGovernment Issues Guidelines to Prevent Coronavirus Attack
A senior official from the Ministry of Health said yesterday that people should take extra precautions against a new form of the coronavirus, which was recently found in the Kingdom among some patients.
The virus was diagnosed in three people causing the death of two of them; the third is still undergoing treatment.
"There is no cause for alarm about the coronavirus. However, people should be aware of its presence and they should take preventive measures to keep the disease away from them," Undersecretary to the Ministry of Health for Public Health Ziad Al-Memish told Arab News yesterday. Read MoreA new respiratory illness - from the same family as the Sars virus - appears not to spread easily, experts at the World Health Organization (WHO) say.
A Qatari man, 49, with the virus is being treated in the UK. The first person known to have had it, in Saudi Arabia, died.
The WHO said on Friday that it appeared the new virus "cannot be easily transmitted from person to person."
The Sars virus, which emerged in China in 2002, killed hundreds of people.
Both Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) and the new, un-named, virus - as well as the common cold virus - belong to the coronavirus family. Read MoreSalmonella in Netherlands and US from Dutch Smoked Fish
Scores of people in the Netherlands and the US have caught salmonella after eating Dutch smoked salmon, say Dutch health authorities.
About 200 people have fallen ill in the Netherlands along with about 100 people in the US, said the National Institute for Public Health (RIVM).
An RIVM official told the BBC that this could be the "tip of the iceberg". Read MorePatients in 23 states are being warned that the spinal steroid shots they received may have given them a rare and deadly fungal meningitis.
So far, there have been 35 cases and "at least five deaths," according to the CDC, which expects the case count to rise. There have been 25 cases and three deaths in Tennessee, four cases and one death in Virginia, two cases and one death in Maryland, two cases in Florida, one case in North Carolina, and one case in Indiana.
All cases are linked to spinal shots with three specific lots of a steroid called methylprednisolone acetate. The drug, without preservatives, was made and placed in syringes by a single firm, New England Compounding Center (NECC) of Framingham, Mass. Read MoreMeningitis Crisis Expands; More Infections, Deaths
The crisis surrounding the multistate outbreak of fungal meningitis linked to tainted steroid shots deepened Thursday, as federal officials reported that more people had received the shots than previously believed. Doctors also reported the first case of a joint infection outside the spine.
The CDC says close to 14,000 people may have gotten the shots, not 13,000 as was first estimated.
Fourteen people have died since the outbreak was first reported last month. Read MoreThe US health authorities say 15 people have now died from an outbreak of fungal meningitis linked to steroid injections to treat back pain.
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said the latest death occurred in Indiana - the second in the state.
In all, nearly 200 people in 13 US states have been affected.
A company in Massachusetts earlier recalled more than 17,000 vials of steroid it had sent to more than 70 clinics across America.
Thirteen states have been affected: Tennessee, Michigan, Virginia, Indiana, Florida, Maryland, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Ohio, Illinois, Idaho and Texas. Read More