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E-raamat: The Contextual Determinants of Malaria [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

  • Formaat: 400 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Oct-2002
  • Kirjastus: Resources for the Future Press (RFF Press)
  • ISBN-13: 9781936331734
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 244,66 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 349,51 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 400 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Oct-2002
  • Kirjastus: Resources for the Future Press (RFF Press)
  • ISBN-13: 9781936331734
As malaria and other tropical diseases continue their resurgence, questions about the potential impacts of environmental and demographic factors are becoming more critical. Recent attempts to understand the increase in malaria incidence often acknowledge the importance of social, economic and other contextual variables, but fail to explicitly incorporate them into models or consider how they evolve in relation to one another. This problem is of crucial interest to the climate policy community, which has been buffeted by claims and counter-claims concerning the impact of climate change on malaria. This important volume examines the contextual determinants of malaria and attempts to develop methods for incorporating them into projections of future incidence. Internationally renowned health specialists, economists, and other social scientists provide regional and global perspectives on risk modeling, the history of eradication efforts, current determinants (including environmental, social, and economic factors), and prospects for new vaccines and drugs. The Contextual Determinants of Malaria argues that an association of climate change with increased malaria incidence will have at least as much to do with human aging, poverty, urbanization, and population movement as with a rise in global temperatures. By placing climate in this perspective, The Contextual Determinants of Malaria focuses attention on the public health needs most critical in both the immediate and long-term future. It encourages multidisciplinary analysis of malaria control, and improves our understanding of the interactions of the diverse range of factors involved in the incidence and spread of the disease.
Preface ix
Contributors xi
Introduction 1(8)
Elizabeth A. Casman
Hadi Dowlatabadi
PART 1 Malaria and Climate Change: Issues and Analytic Tools
International Efforts to Understand the Link between Climate Change and Malaria
9(5)
Anthony J. McMichael
R. Sari Kovats
Of Malaria and Models: Challenges in Modeling Global Climate Change and Malaria Risk
14(14)
Pim Martens
Discussion: The Proper Use of Malaria Models
25(3)
Duane J. Gubler
Malaria Potential and Malaria Risk
28(7)
Elizabeth A. Casman
PART 2 Regional Assessments
Determinants of Malaria in the Americas
35(24)
Donald R. Roberts
Penny Masuoka
Andrew Y. Au
The Control of Malaria in Brazil
59(7)
Renato d'A. Gusmao
Determinants of Malaria in WHO European Region
66(27)
Guido Sabatinelli
Determinants of Malaria in Oceania and East Asia
93(17)
Allan Schapira
Determinants of Malaria in South Asia
110(27)
Vinod Prakash Sharma
Discussion: Boundaries, Health Impact Assessment, and Integrated Vector Management
130(7)
Robert Bos
Determinants of Malaria in the Middle East and North Africa
137(30)
Andrei E. Beljaev
Determinants of Malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa
167(22)
Jonathan St. H. Cox
Jean Mouchet
David J. Bradley
PART 3 A Changing Context
Climate Variability, Climate Change, and Malaria
189(27)
Reid E. Basher
Mark A. Cane
Great Expectations: Malaria Vaccines and Antimalaria Drugs for the Next Century
216(23)
Robert S. Desowitz
Impacts of Global Population Trends
239(21)
Wolfgang Lutz
Reading the Tea Leaves: Economic Scenarios for the Twenty-First Century
260(10)
Lester B. Lave
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Population Migration and Malaria
270(11)
Janice Longstreth
Anatole Kondrachine
Human Population Movement: Recent Patterns
281(11)
Ilya R. Fischhoff
Malaria Control and the Future of International Public Health
292(39)
Socrates Litsios
PART 4 Synthesis
Integrated Assessment of Malaria Risk
331(18)
Baruch Fischhoff
Ilya R. Fischhoff
Elizabeth A. Casman
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Importance of Context in Defining Malaria Risk: Summary and Discussion
349(10)
Elizabeth A. Casman
Reid E. Basher
Andrei E. Beljaev
Martin Birley
Robert Bos
Jonathan St. H. Cox
Robert S. Desowitz
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Baruch Fischhoff
Dana A. Focks
Duane J. Gubler
Renato d'A. Gusmao
Chev Kidson
Anatole Kondrachine
R. Sari Kovats
Lester B. Lave
Socrates Litsios
Janice Longstreth
Wolfgang Lutz
Anthony J. McMichael
M. Granger Morgan
Jean Mouchet
Paul Reiter
Donald R. Roberts
Guido Sabatinelli
Allan Schapira
Michael E. Schlesinger
Vinod Prakash Sharma
Kenneth M. Strzepek
Tang Lin-hua
Mark L. Wilson
Index 359(23)
About the Editors 382


Elizabeth A. Casman is a research engineer in the department of Engineering and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University.

Hadi Dowlatabadi holds a Canada Research Chair in Applied Mathematics at the University of British Columbia, and is a university fellow at Resources for the Future. Formerly, he was director of the Center for the Integrated Study of the Human Dimensions of Global Change at Carnegie Mellon University.