Helen Power
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Drug-resistant malaria
A global problem and the Thai response
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This chapter deals with two specific incidents in the history of drug-resistant malaria. First, the response to the discovery of chloroquine resistance in Thailand is by Dr. Tranakchit Harinasuta. Second, the West's and Thailand's response to the drugs derived from the Chinese medicinal herb qing hao. Malaria was included among many other illnesses in the Division of Infectious Diseases Control. In 1918, King Vajiravudh (Rama VI) created a Department of Health to supervise the medical and public health services of Thailand. The chapter describes the non-acceptance of the Thai physician Tranakchit Harinasuta's work, which serves as a parallel for the more recent Western dissent over the qinghaosu drugs. It develops the themes of the historically determined, self-interested nature of Western pharmaceutical production, and the West's attempts to control the production of knowledge and the application of its results in developing countries.

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