2006年VOA标准英语-Uganda Fights Drug Resistance in Malaria,(在线收听) |
By Carolyn Weaver Anti-microbial resistance -- germs becoming resistant to medicine -- is part of the natural history of infectious disease. No drug can kill every single harmful microbe. A few bugs inside a sick person always survive. Over time, these resistant microbes may come to predominate, rendering formerly effective medicines useless. In Uganda, as in other African countries, the fight against disease is a race against drug resistance. -------------------------------------------------------
Sister Florence Nawanga is an herbalist at a convent near Entebbe in south-central Uganda. For the last few years, she's been cultivating an herb that's native to China, but that might hold the key to defeating malaria in Africa, too. “This is the plant,” she says, pointing to a small fern-like plant she’s seeded in the bush near the convent. It's called "sweet wormwood," or Artemesia annua, and the drug derived from it, artemisinin, is the key ingredient of what is currently the most effective anti-malarial medicine. It came into use just as older anti-malarials such as chloroquine and quinine began to fail. In the Kampala slum of Katanga, a grandmother cares for 11 children without a single mosquito net, administering the older, less effective anti-malaria drugs to the baby. Last week, she says, the medicine failed to save the youngest child in her care.
Dr. Okot-Nwang says perhaps the most important way to prevent an even deadlier variant -- multiple-drug-resistant, or MDR tuberculosis -- is using community-based volunteers to make sure that patients complete their drug regimen even after they feel better. “This means someone in the neighborhood who is trained locally to give the patient TB drugs,” he explains, “and who records on the TB cards as the patient swallows the drugs.” Ugandan doctors say that increased funding from the rest of the world for combating HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria is making a real difference in Uganda. There is other good news: recently, researchers at the University of California at Berkeley announced they have grown a purer form of artemisinin in the laboratory, using yeast cells. This synthetic form could be the basis for a low-cost combination treatment, lifting the burden of malaria from African peoples and economies. But scientists also warn that if artemisinin is not used correctly as part of a drug-combination cocktail, the malaria parasite will quickly become resistant to it as well. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/5/32353.html |