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Where Malaria came from?
History of Malaria.

And......yeah i need help about writing the INTRODUCTION and CONCLUSION of my topic (malaria) Please help me this thing about the Introduction And Conclusion
YOu can also give me the link of malaria

Thank You so much

Benny

2007-05-11 03:17:05 · 3 answers · asked by Benny 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

3 answers

Here are the tools necessary to write your research report.....
..........If I write then the grade will........
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I'll provide the information needed from the best source, but I don't do the work...........Most of the time homework help takes the information and runs. Not bothering to give a best answer. That is why I don't write it. ......... S o r r y ! ..........

http://www.chez.com/malaria/09ansu15.htm
Africa, Asia and Latin America with 300-500 Million people infected (WHO, 1997).
One of the largest health problems of these countries.

Malaria or a disease resembling malaria has been noted for more than 4,000 years. From the Italian for "bad air," mal'aria has probably influenced to a great extent human populations and human history.


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The History of Malaria, an Ancient Disease
......................From the .......................
..........Center For Disease Control
http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/history/index.htm
The symptoms of malaria were described in ancient Chinese medical writings. In 2700 BC, several characteristic symptoms of what would later be named malaria were described in the Nei Ching, The Canon of Medicine). Nei Ching was edited by Emperor Huang Ti. Malaria became widely recognized in Greece by the 4th century BCE, and it was responsible for the decline of many of the city-state populations. Hippocrates noted the principal symptoms.

Discovery of the Malaria Parasite (1880)
Naming of Human Malaria Parasites (1890,1897)
Discovery That Mosquitoes Transmit Malaria Parasites (1897-1898)
Ronald Ross, a British officer in the Indian Medical Service, was the first to demonstrate that malaria parasites could be transmitted from infected patients to mosquitoes.

http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/history/index.htm#ancienthistory

2007-05-11 03:45:03 · answer #1 · answered by LucySD 7 · 0 0

Malaria is probably one of the oldest diseases known to mankind that has had profound impact on our history. But for malaria, the outcomes of many a wars and destinies of many a kings would have been different. It has been responsible for the decline of nations and crushing military defeats, often having caused more casualties than the weapons themselves. For centuries it prevented any economic development in vast regions of the earth. It continues to be a huge social, economical and health problem, particularly in the tropical countries. History of malaria and its terrible effects is as ancient as the history of civilization, therefore history of mankind itself.

Malaria was linked with poisonous vapours of swamps or stagnant water on the ground since time immemorial. This probable relationship was so firmly established that it gave the two most frequently used names to the disease mal’aria, later shortened to one word malaria, and paludisme. The term malaria (from the Italian mala “bad” and aria “air”) was used by the Italians to describe the cause of intermittent fevers associated with exposure to marsh air or miasma. The word was introduced to English by Horace Walpole, who wrote in 1740 about a “horrid thing called mal’aria, that comes to Rome every summer and kills one.” The term malaria, without the apostrophe, evolved into the name of the disease only in the 20th century. Up to that point the various intermittent fevers had been called jungle fever, marsh fever, paludal fever, or swamp fever.

For more info go to http://www.malariasite.com/malaria/History.htm

2007-05-11 12:11:28 · answer #2 · answered by rsanders05 2 · 0 0

CAUTION - BEWARE - CAUTION

With all the links on offer from other contributors there is a REAL TEMPTATION to Copy and Paste 'chunks' from other people's work!!!

I suggest you read through a selection of the material you find and then construct your own report.

This will demonstrate YOUR understanding of the subject :-)

Remember the three parts of a report:

Tell 'em what you are going to tell 'em ( Introduction)
Tell 'em (Body of report)
Tell 'em what you have told 'em (Summary)


CAUTION - BEWARE - CAUTION

Plagiarism is easy to detect.

BEWARE -- CAUTION -- BEWARE

P.S. The 'offence', once detected, will stay on your academic record for evermore!!!

LOOKOUT -- BEWARE -- TAKE CARE --

DO NOT BE TEMPTED -- DO IT YOURSELF!!

2007-05-11 13:27:39 · answer #3 · answered by Rod Mac 5 · 0 0

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