Macdonald Michael
Catonsville, Maryland, USA.
Malariaworld J. 2024 Apr 9;15:6. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.10948595. eCollection 2024.
The stagnation in malaria elimination efforts can be attributed to several contributing reasons: large populations displaced by conflict and severe weather, insecticide and drug resistance, competing priorities with COVID-19 and Ebola. Part of the problem may also be us and our pre-pandemic systems. The accelerated response to the COVID-19 emergency carries lessons for global efforts against the 'other emergency', malaria. Michael has worked in vector control since 1977, beginning with Peace Corps in the Sabah (E. Malaysia) MCP. He earned an Sc.D. from Johns Hopkins researching malaria transmission in Pakistan; lived in Burma, Thailand, Cambodia and Zambia with stints in the US and Geneva supporting programmes throughout Africa and Asia, working for Johns Hopkins and Boston Universities, USAID, WFP, UNHCR, WHO, IVCC and NGOs involved in public health entomology and vector control in Africa and Asia.
因冲突和恶劣天气而流离失所的大量人口、杀虫剂和抗药性、与新冠疫情和埃博拉疫情相竞争的优先事项。部分问题可能也出在我们以及我们疫情前的体系上。对新冠疫情紧急情况的快速应对为全球抗击“另一场紧急情况”——疟疾的努力带来了经验教训。迈克尔自1977年起从事病媒控制工作,最初是在马来西亚沙巴的消灭疟疾运动中参加和平队。他在约翰·霍普金斯大学获得理学博士学位,研究巴基斯坦的疟疾传播情况;曾在缅甸、泰国、柬埔寨和赞比亚生活,期间在美国和日内瓦工作,支持非洲和亚洲各地的项目,为约翰·霍普金斯大学、波士顿大学、美国国际开发署、世界粮食计划署、联合国难民署、世界卫生组织、国际病媒控制中心以及参与非洲和亚洲公共卫生昆虫学和病媒控制的非政府组织工作过 。