Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

May 14, 2008

Neglected diseases in the news

Trypanosoma forms in blood smear from patient with African trypanosomiasisThe so-called neglected diseases comprise a number of parasitic and bacterial infections which are the most common afflictions of humankind. So, how can these diseases be "neglected"? When you get sick, you don't ignore your illness, do you? But we all can ignore a disease... as long as we ourselves don't suffer it.

Neglected diseases are especially endemic in low-income populations in developing regions of Africa, Asia, and the Americas. They mostly affect the poorest people, living in remote rural areas, urban slums or conflict zones. In the meantime, the rest of humankind just "neglect" those pains, as exemplified by the poor coverage on news media.

(If you already know about these diseases, just jump to the paragraph starting with "An interesting study...")

According to the Global Network For Neglected Tropical Disease Control, the most prevalent neglected tropical diseases are:



























DiseaseCausative agents
Affected people
Soil-transmitted helminthiasesSeveral nematodes: roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides), whipworm (Trichuris trichiura), hookworms (Ancylostoma duodenale, Necator americanus)Over 2 billion infected; over 70,000 deaths/year
Lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis)Several nematodes: Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi, B. timoriOver 120 million infected; 40 million with clinical symptoms
River blindness (onchocerciasis)A nematode (Onchocerca volvulus)37 million infected; 500,000 visually impaired; 270,000 blind
Schistosomiasis (bilharzia)Several flukes (trematodes) of the Schistosoma genus200 million infected; over 200,000 deaths/year
TrachomaA bacterium (Chlamydia trachomatis)84 million infected; 8 million visually impaired or irreversibly blind



But, unfortunately, the list of neglected diseases is much longer, including:
[disease name, causative agent]

Wow, if you are still reading this, you must be really interested. Or you've just jumped over all those boring, unpronounceable words. That's OK. But the title of the post said "in the news", so let's go.


ResearchBlogging.orgAn interesting study has just been published on the open-access journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, showing that these diseases rarely make the headlines... Oh, wait, we already knew that. True —but this report seems to be the first one trying to analyze, in a quantitative manner, the international media coverage of neglected diseases, as a support for future advocacy work.

The authors searched the archives of 11 English-language media, from January 2003 to June 2007, including 6 newspapers (The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, The Financial Times), BBC Online, CNN.com, Agence France Presse (AFP), and two news magazines (Time and The Economist). They analyzed coverage of "neglected diseases" in general, with a focus on African trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis and Chagas' disease (probably not the most neglected). The researchers also interviewed leading health journalists, highlighting factors influencing reporting.

During the study period, they found only 113 articles on neglected diseases. In comparison, there were over 1000 articles on HIV/AIDS in the AFP database alone during the same period. There was wide disparity in coverage between the various media: the BBC had the highest coverage (20 articles), while CNN had the least coverage (only 1 article). Coverage of global health issues was particularly poor in the American media.

As the authors recognize, it would be useful to expand the analysis, including more international media and languages other than English. However, the selected media may be considered a useful sample, and some patterns emerged:
" For example, the penchant for a local angle was even parochial at times. Stories get written about leishmaniasis in pets before humans, as was seen in The Daily Telegraph. "
In the interviews, journalists explained that the main obstacles for reporting on these issues were: a lack of real news development, the drive to cater to domestic audiences, and competing health interests.
" “Poor people dying from an illness is not news,” unless there is some change or development, one producer from an international broadcaster said. But HIV/AIDS was widely reported on “because it sells stories” and has the funding and attention of policymakers. "
That's perfectly understandable: news media need to make a living, and only "newsworthy" stories get the attention. Here, the role of health agencies (either public or private) is essential: all journalists said health agencies were not communicating adequately about the burden of neglected tropical diseases. Some organizations (World Health Organization, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation) were criticized for the difficulty in reaching officials for comment, while non-governmental organizations such as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) were cited as good sources for stories.

News coverage was also difficult due to the lack of powerful "human" stories from the field (including interviews with patients).
" The “human element” was powerful, but few journalists were able to get such stories first-hand from the field. This represented a real constraint for coverage. One communications advisor (consulting for DNDi) said health agencies needed to present stories featuring “real people” rather than “experts in their ivory towers” and the “yuck” factor about these diseases needed to be played up to “grab the public imagination” rather than facts about the lifecycle of the parasite. "
Remarkably, journalists who did cover these diseases were often personally motivated. Andrew Jack (Financial Times), who authored the largest number of articles detected in the study, said his reporting was “100%” driven by his interest.

In other words, a single individual can make a difference.


Original article (open access):
Balasegaram, M., Balasegaram, S., Malvy, D., Millet, P., Hotez, P.J. (2008). Neglected Diseases in the News: A Content Analysis of Recent International Media Coverage Focussing on Leishmaniasis and Trypanosomiasis. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2(5), e234. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000234



Related links:


Image credits:
Trypanosoma forms in blood smear from patient with African trypanosomiasis. Source: Public Health Image Library (PHIL). Content provider: CDC/Dr. Myron G. Schultz.

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Apr 7, 2008

Charlton Heston

Charlton Heston
A great actor, Charlton Heston, died on April 5th, 2008.

Can you find the connection between Heston and actinomycetes?

(Please leave your answer as a comment to this post. I will do the same).

Slant cultures of several actinomycetes
Charlton Heston's image from Poletti.
Image credits for actinomycetes: CDC/Dr. David Berd (PHIL #3078), 1972. From the CDC Public Health Image Library, via Wikimedia Commons.

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Oct 8, 2007

Environment, microbes and infections

The Fundación Lilly (Lilly Foundation, Spain) organizes a scientific symposium titled Environmental Changes, Microbial Systems and Infections, to be held at San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Madrid (Spain), 15-16 November 2007. Topics:

  • Keynote Address, by Julian Davies: "Everything depends on everything else"
  • Environmental changes and microbial evolutionary trajectories
  • The impact of major environmental changes in the microbiosphere
  • Diagnosing environment-related damages in microbial systems
  • Science for intervention: surveillance and bioremediation of damaged microbial systems
  • Multidrug resistance in tuberculosis, malaria and HIV
  • Seminars on practical aspects related with prevention, diagnosis and treatment
You may have a look at the preliminary program, which includes summaries and information about speakers. Or download a pdf file with a program summary.

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Jun 24, 2007

The new Scientific American


Scientific American has been redesigned, and the complete July issue is available for download. It's a free download until June 30, so get it now! The only microbiology-related article deals with inflammation and its relation to cancer: A Malignant Flame, by Gary Stix. And a lot more of science reading is inside.

(Did I mention it's free?)

(Hey, free is good)

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Jun 14, 2007

Congratulations! It's a Scintilla!

The guys at Nature Publishing Group are trying hard to build "the definitive" Web 2.0 for scientists: Connotea (online reference management service), Nature Network (online meeting place for scientists), and now Scintilla.

Scintilla is an aggregator of science weblogs, news stories and publication databases, with two remarkable features. First, sources are manually selected to be related only to science. And second, you can rate and recommend stories to other people (which can be organized in groups according to their interests, for instance microbiology). Some comments are available on Nascent, bbgm and MicrobiologyBytes.

(Twisted note no. 1) Nature Network (network.nature.com) is not the same as Nature Network (www.naturenetwork.net [live imagery and sound from cameras set up in Nature throughout the world]), which is also different to Nature Network (www.naturenetwork.org [platform to help developing countries for economic development and environmental protection]).

(Twisted note no. 2) Please don't confuse Scintilla (scintilla.nature.com) with Scintilla (www.scintilla.com [jewelry]), or even with Scintilla (www.scintilla.org [free source code editing component]). OK?

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Jun 9, 2007

Time travel

You may know Google News Archive Search. I enjoy using it to search for old, historical stories. Soon I noticed that the oldest (free) stories came from the archives of Time Magazine, which are fully available for searching and reading (don't miss the covers!). Looking for articles containing the words "Streptomyces" or "actinomycete" in the complete Time archive, I got only five hits. Remarkably, they were written on 1948, 1949, 1950 and 1963. (So sad, it seems nothing related to these terms has happened in almost 50 years!)

The Time articles, which deal with the discovery of antibiotics from actinomycetes, are:

(*) Waksman was on the cover of this issue of Time magazine.

(Concerning the discovery of streptomycin, I very much recommend an article by Veronique Mistiaen: Time, and the great healer, The Guardian, Nov. 2, 2002)

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