Hi, would be good if you are able to elaborate on the point of Malaria being an environmental (rather than a vaccine) issue, as your title suggests, perhaps by summarising some relevant research. I have absolutely zero knowledge on this but not sure if cleanliness is the issue, or something more specific like stagnant water etc.? Some cited references/sources would also be useful further reading. :)
I agree that an improved title would help make this post make more sense. The author is trying to point out that addressing environmental factors which propagate malaria (which the author should describe somewhere) would improve the effectiveness of existing structural (bed nets) and medical (vaccines and chemo prevention) interventions. But the existing title makes it seem like the environmental and vaccine models are in tensions, whereas they aren’t mutually exclusive.
Hi, would be good if you are able to elaborate on the point of Malaria being an environmental (rather than a vaccine) issue, as your title suggests, perhaps by summarising some relevant research. I have absolutely zero knowledge on this but not sure if cleanliness is the issue, or something more specific like stagnant water etc.? Some cited references/sources would also be useful further reading. :)
I agree that an improved title would help make this post make more sense. The author is trying to point out that addressing environmental factors which propagate malaria (which the author should describe somewhere) would improve the effectiveness of existing structural (bed nets) and medical (vaccines and chemo prevention) interventions. But the existing title makes it seem like the environmental and vaccine models are in tensions, whereas they aren’t mutually exclusive.
Will rewrite it for clear clarification. Thanks for the feedback.
Sure, thanks for the feedback.