{"id":27,"date":"2010-03-21T18:48:25","date_gmt":"2010-03-21T17:48:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/?page_id=27"},"modified":"2024-05-27T14:54:50","modified_gmt":"2024-05-27T12:54:50","slug":"the-tomorrow-of-malaria","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/reviews\/the-tomorrow-of-malaria\/","title":{"rendered":"The Tomorrow of Malaria"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>The Tomorrow of Malaria is<\/em>, in large part, the chronicle                of yesterday&#8217;s malaria wars &#8211; a hundred years&#8217; conflict  fought as                much between malariologists as against the parasite. This  is the                centenary of Ronald Ross&#8217;s discovery of the transmission  of bird                malaria through the mosquito. The super-sensitive,  single-minded                Ross went to his grave still holding the firm conviction  that malaria                could be eradicated if only weak-willed governments would  commit                themselves to exploit his discovery and attack the  anopheline in                their watery lairs.<\/p>\n<p>On the other side were those who considered malaria to be  a social                disease. Malaria would disappear only when the economic  life of                the subjugated populations improved. Good housing, good  nutrition,                good health and education services, and modern  agricultural practices                were the best antimalarials. The anopheline without the  parasite                was only another biting nuisance. Economic betterment was  advanced                as the cause of the disappearance of malaria from northern  Europe                and England &#8211; where more than 10,000 cases had been  admitted to                London&#8217;s St Thomas&#8217;s Hospital alone between 1860 and 1870,  followed                by a rapid decline to four or five cases each year by  1925.<\/p>\n<p>Schismatics soon arose on each side. The technocrats  divided into                the chemical-therapy camp led by the German bacteriologist  Robert                Koch, who believed malaria should be drugged into  submission, and                the vector-control camp led by the Englishmen Malcolm  Watson and                L. W, Hackett and the Americans Fred Soper and Paul  Russell, who                maintained the Rossian stand of selective anopheline  control. The                sociocrats split into the active-betterment camp and a &#8216;do  nothing&#8217;                camp which maintained, on the basis of prevailing  immunological                fact and theory, that holoendemic malaria led to a benign  state                in adults. The unfortunate wastage of the young was a  necessary,                worthwhile cost in the community&#8217;s journey to functional  immunity.                Those technocrat-sociocrat wars were fought in the &#8216;bow  and arrow&#8217;                era of malariology, Quinine was the only therapeutic drug,  and pyrethrum                and Paris green the only insecticides. Then the Second  World War                ended, the pesticide DDT was rediscovered and the World  Health Organization                (WHO) embarked on its global crusade to eradicate malaria.<\/p>\n<p>Socrates Litsios. the WHO insider and sometimes apostate,  has written                a slim, fascinating book. Its greatest strength is its  account of                the WHO malaria eradication campaign beginning in 1955 and  ultimately                failing in 1969. Litsios recounts how the vector  technocrats, now                armed with DDT, took over WHO. In 1953, the psychiatrist  Brock Chisholm,                campaigning for re-election as director general, had  remarked: &#8220;one                cultural anthropologist is worth more than 100 malaria  teams&#8221;. The                malariologists campaigned on the promise of malaria  eradication.                Chisholm lost and was replaced by the Brazilian  malariologist Marcolino                Candau. For the new WHO. nothing less than global  eradication of                malaria would do &#8211; impure thoughts of &#8216;control&#8217; could lead  to excommunication.                A strict, universal formula for DDT, application and  surveillance                was imposed on all national programmes. A timetable to  eradication                was promised.<\/p>\n<p>In his book, Litsios rarely makes a direct comment or  expresses                an opinion. But his description of events and selection of  citations                speak for his sentiments. In this way, he condemns WHO for  being                too inflexible; for imposing a universal prescription when  each                setting required a programme to accommodate its vectors,  its parasites                and its human population&#8217;s culture, behaviour and economy.  Litsios                faults WHO for not realizing that the massive reservoir of  malaria,                sub-Saharan Africa, was undoable. Nor did they appreciate  the political-economic                pressures on the new governments then emerging from  colonial paternalism                that would distract from the national malaria campaign.<\/p>\n<p>The final chapter, &#8220;The Tomorrow of Today&#8221;, is the  sobering account                of malaria&#8217;s current annual toll &#8211; 300 million cases with 2  million                deaths, DDT is gone. Cheap, effective chemo-therapeutics  and prophylactics                are gone. Multi-insecticide and multi-drug resistance are  here,                Steady-state, benign (for adults) holoendemic malaria has  been replaced,                in many settings, by unstable hyperendemicity &#8211; functional  immunity                impaired by the <em>ad hoc<\/em> chemotherapy distributed  from the                primary health centres. It is <em>d\u00e9j\u00e0 vu<\/em> all over  again as the                technocrat-sociocrat wars continue. The molecular  technocrats now                offer the unfulfilled, over-hyped, crime-tainted promise  of a vaccine.                Non-molecular technocrats offer bed nets dipped in  permethrin. In                one of his few displays of direct feeling, Litsios, in  this final                chapter, reveals himself to be the humane socio-crat: &#8220;The  aim should                be to improve the quality of life, with regard to human  dignity,                the realization of people&#8217;s potentials, and the  achievement of a                decent standard of living. This implies a radical revision  of established                practices.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This is a fine, powerful little book. I would make all  molecular-malaria                graduate students read it before they clone their first  gene or                make their first hybridoma. Come to that, I would insist  that their                mentors read it too.<\/p>\n<p>Robert S. Desowitz is in the Department of Epidemiology,  School                of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel  Hill, Chapel                Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA.<\/p>\n<p><em>Published in<\/em> <em> Nature, Vol 383 September 1996<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/images\/mosquito.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"\" width=\"43\" height=\"60\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>The tomorrow of malaria<\/em> by Socrates Litsios provides a short                and immensely readable overview of the past, present and  future                of malaria. With its stimulating and provocative title, we  are instantly                reminded that, while malaria has been with us for  thousands of years,                the disease remains and will remain a critical global  problem for                future generations. The aims of the book are clearly laid  out in                the introduction. The author shows that by drawing on an  historical                perspective and by looking back at the successes and  failures of                campaigns to central and eradicate malaria in the past we  will more                readily understand the current and future situations. In  particular,                Litsios emphasizes that the rich epidemiological studies  and the                development of ideas on &#8220;malaria as a disease&#8221; in the  pre-DDT era                must not be forgotten, for, as he states, &#8220;it is of great  importance                to keep alive the excitement of the malaria story, an aim  to which                this publication is dedicated&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>The author successfully meets this aim. The design of  the book                itself is simple and attractive and immediately offers  both the                specialist and non-specialist reader a fascinating insight  into                the debates as well as the problems and politics that have  thwarted                attempts over the centuries to eradicate and control  malaria. The                book is divided into three parts: &#8216;The yesterday of  malaria&#8217;, &#8216;The                today of malaria&#8217;, and &#8216;The tomorrow of malaria&#8217;. In the  historical                part, the ancient history of the disease receives a brief  mention                and it is the history of its control in different parts of  the world                during the twentieth century, following the discoveries by  Charles                Louis Alphonse Laveran, Patrick Manson, Ronald Ross,  Giovanni Grassi                and others of the plasmodium parasites and the mosquito  cycle, that                dominates this section. Litsios&#8217;s fascinating accounts of  the researches,                ideas, disputes and frustrations of five key  malariologists, Paul                Russell, Louis Hackett, C Percy James, Sir Malcolm Watson  and Nicholas                Swellengrebel, are especially illuminating. The second  section explores                the DDT era of malaria control and eradication. Revealing  comments                are taken from official reports as well as from the  unpublished                diaries of a number of leading players in the main malaria  conferences                and debates, allowing the reader to be drawn into the  realities                and complexities of malaria central efforts in the 1950s  and 1960s.                The final part of the book offers a valuable opportunity  to understand                how and why global politics have shaped the present and  future malaria                situation. It also includes a short discussion of the  various strategies                and scientific tools which are currently being adopted or  developed                in the hope of controlling the global threat of malaria.  The book                ends on a note of caution. Malaria is interwoven into the  fabric                of life in a complex way and, as Litsios demonstrates,  there will                be no easy answers to solving the very critical issue of  the &#8220;tomorrow                of malaria&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>The book is published at a time when we shall shortly be  &#8220;celebrating&#8221;                the centenary of the discovery of the mosquito  transmission of malaria                and the golden jubilee of the World Health Organisation&#8217;s  attempts                at global eradication of the disease. It is a timely  reminder that,                in spite of important scientific discoveries and global  campaigns,                human endeavors have not solved the tomorrow of malaria.  This is                an excellent introductory text and highly recommended for  all those                who are concerned with the past, present and future of  malaria and                its wider implications.<\/p>\n<p>Mary J Dobson, Wellcome Unit, Oxford<br \/>\n<em>Published in<\/em> <em>Medical History, 41, July 1997.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/images\/mosquito.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"\" width=\"43\" height=\"60\" \/><\/p>\n<p>This small light blue                paperback, unassuming in appearance, is a surprisingly  potent and                captivating account of malaria history and programmes  aimed at malaria                eradication or control. It is replete with tidbits of  information,                whether for the historian, scientist, public health  specialist,                or politician, and is a fine starting point for further  study of                this field. Key players and stories are featured as  Litsios painstakingly                brings forth the viewpoints and decisions that have driven  malaria                programmes from one decade to the next. Meanwhile, his  underlying                wish is that a greater understanding and appreciation of  the past                will be realized and bring new hope for the people of  tomorrow.<\/p>\n<p>This book provides glimpses                into the thinking of the times since the malaria parasite  was first                discovered by Charles L. A. Laveran in 1880, through  landmark meetings                including the League of Nation&#8217;s Conference on Rural  Hygiene (Bandoeng,                1937) and a series of World Health Organization (WHO)  Expert Committee                Meetings that convened between 1946 and 1986. This is a  whirlwind                tour of the malaria situation and challenges faced by  several generations.                Litsios frequently recaptures quotes from the past and  cleverly                employs irony to bring attention to major decisions which  seemed                to have been made with a disregard for available  knowledge, with                irrational thinking, or with political motivations. This  style makes                for amusing reading, but, importantly, it succeeds in  bringing emphasis                to elements of the history of malaria that ought to be  revisited,                and nudges current generations to critically assess the  logic behind                important decisions today.<\/p>\n<p>Strategic plans for                malaria control shifted dramatically from a broad public  health                and social approach prior to World War II, where malaria  research                in areas such as immunity and epidemiology were also  deemed relevant,                to the WHO&#8217;s militant-like eradication campaign between  1955 and                1969, where DDT elimination of Anopheline mosquitoes  became the                dominant goal. Now, with reference to the changing  politics of the                post Cold War Era, Litsios conveys the message that it is  an opportune                time to tackle malaria with renewed recognition of  knowledge and                studies from the past, and where &#8220;human development&#8221; is  also a focus.                With this in mind, he carefully scrutinizes directions  taken especially                by the WHO as the world&#8217;s leader of malaria eradication  and control                programmes for almost 50 years. His critical analysis  points to                conflicting viewpoints that have existed with regards to  philosophical                approaches, strategic planning, and methodologies. Litsios  points                out examples where knowledge of the times was overlooked  as the                WHO&#8217;s global eradication campaign was designed and  implemented;                in some cases a sense of urgency overruled practicality;  or, Cold                War politics dictated its direction. Later, Litsios  discusses one                of the WHO&#8217;s current focuses as a primary supporter and  patent holder                of the widely publicized candidate malaria vaccine known  as Spf66.                Litsios notes that once the results are available for the  latest                in a series of large scale trials &#8211; conducted in Thailand &#8211;  that                the future of this vaccine candidate &#8220;will be reviewed and  decided                upon.&#8221; The reader is thus brought up-to-date as the world  currently                waits at another major crossroads to see in which  direction the                WHO will decide to proceed.<\/p>\n<p>Litsios&#8217; critical accounts                are meant to be instructive. He takes his readers through  periods                of high hopes, confidence, despair, and wonder, as history  shows                that massive efforts have helped little to avenge malaria &#8211;  the                &#8220;King of Diseases,&#8221; which, as he notes, it was dubbed long  ago in                ancient Indian literature. The Tomorrow of Malaria is very  timely                as the 100th anniversary of the August 1897 discovery in  Secunderabad,                India of malaria in mosquitoes approaches. The past 100  years of                discovery, both scientific and personal, are leading to a  special                period of reflection. Socrates Litsios, who is currently a  Senior                Scientist with the WHO Division of Control of Tropical  Diseases,                writes with a sense of optimism as he refers to the WHO&#8217;s  current                Global Malaria Control Strategy, a product of the  Ministerial Conference                on Malaria (Amsterdam, 1992), and the end of neglect  noting that                this plan is &#8220;beginning to yield tangible results.&#8221; He has  hope                in &#8220;the tomorrow of malaria&#8221; as he beckons his readers to  be knowledgeable,                logical, and responsible when deciding upon the present  and future                of malaria.<\/p>\n<p>I especially recommend                this penetrating little book to anyone working in any area  of malaria                research or control. This literary work may very well mark  a reemergence                of malaria scholars and help these fields flourish with  accomplished                malariologists.<\/p>\n<p>Mary R. Galinski<br \/>\nDepartment of Medical and Molecular Parasitology<br \/>\nNew York University School of Medicine<br \/>\nNew York, NY 10010, USA&lt;<\/p>\n<p><em>Published in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.elsevier.nl\/locate\/inca\/405915\">Parasitology Today<\/a> [PT 13                (2), 83-84, 1997]<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/images\/mosquito.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"\" width=\"43\" height=\"60\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>&#8220;The Tomorrow of malaria&#8221; <\/em>explores the history of malaria.                with the aim of helping the reader to understand why  malaria is                still a major public health problem today and why its  control in                the coming decades will most likely be tied up with how  poverty,                environmental degradation and abuse of natural resources  are successfully                addressed&#8221; (p. 9). Thus Socrates Litsios sums up the scope  and purpose                of this concise but valuable history of malaria. Litsios  has written                an engaging internalist history of malaria control theory,  highlighting                the two principal doctrines of malaria control &#8211; namely,  killing                the parasite with medicine or killing the mosquito during  some phase                of its life cycle &#8211; and the personalities who fought for  them.<\/p>\n<p>In 1955 the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a  program                of all-out malaria eradication; in 1969 the same  organization admitted                the failure of this campaign. Litsios&#8217;s account, with its  global                perspective and insider&#8217;s knowledge of the WHO, deftly  traces the                history of malaria control in the twentieth century,  illuminating                the WHO disaster and the frustrating years since. This  book is required                reading for all who would understand the history of  malaria during                the past century and for those who plan the malaria  campaigns during                the next.<\/p>\n<p>Margaret Humphreys<\/p>\n<p><em>Published in<\/em> <em> the Journal of the History of Medicine.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/images\/mosquito.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"\" width=\"43\" height=\"60\" \/><\/p>\n<p>This is a little gem of a pocket bock (29 X 16 cm). Gems can be                flawed but the author&#8217;s account of the philosophy of  malaria central                through the ages is mostly free of errors; <em>Anopheles  funestus<\/em> is wrongly spelt in some places (pp. 41, 77, 106 and 107)  and <em>An.                nuneztovari<\/em> is incorrectly written on page 85.<\/p>\n<p>The author, having served with the World  Health Organization                since 1967, is in a good position to describe the past and  present,                often conflicting, philosophies of malaria eradication and  central.                The insights and opinions, often prejudiced, of the prime  actors                on the malaria stage, such as Paul Russell, Louis Hackett,  Malcolm                Watson, Percy James, Nicholas Swellengrebel and Arnoldo  Gabaldon,                and the conflicts that arose among them, are well  documented. Much                attention is given to the differences between malaria  central and                the era, doomed to be short, of malaria eradication based  on house-spraying                with DDT. Malariologists remained divided as to whether  preventing                malaria could be achieved through killing mosquitoes or by  drug                treatment and socio-economic progress.<\/p>\n<p>The author has written a popular account  of malaria-central                strategies, from yesterday to tomorrow, that can be  understood by                non-specialists. This little bock, however, should have a  broad                readership, encompassing malariologists and others engaged  in malaria                control or research, because it illustrates how past  experiences                in disease control can be relevant to modern concepts and  ideologies                of control.<\/p>\n<p>In summary, this is a good read, albeit a  rather expensive                one.<\/p>\n<p>M. W. Service<\/p>\n<p><em>Published                in<\/em><em>Annals of Tropical Med.&amp;Para. Vol 91 #2,  March                1997<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Tomorrow of Malaria is, in large part, the chronicle of yesterday&#8217;s malaria wars &#8211; a hundred years&#8217; conflict fought as much between malariologists as against the parasite. This is the centenary of Ronald Ross&#8217;s discovery of the transmission of bird malaria through the mosquito. The super-sensitive, single-minded Ross went to his grave still holding [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"parent":20,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-27","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/27","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=27"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/27\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":310,"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/27\/revisions\/310"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/20"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/socrates.litsios.org\/site\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=27"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}