Abstract

In India, where only a fifth of the overall population, especially in rural areas, receives free or severely subsidized healthcare, malaria presents a significant socioeconomic burden on society. At private institutions, where the condition is typically treated based on presumptions, the majority of people seek medical attention as a result. Given that malaria is a rapidly reproducing parasite that may grow to pandemic proportions within a few days of entering the circulation, early identification and treatment are crucial to averting serious consequences. Female Anopheles mosquitoes, which are most active at dawn and dusk, are the main vectors of malaria. The disease has spread all over India, except in cool places with low mosquito populations, and from 10 days after infection he often shows symptoms between 4 weeks. Treating malaria is difficult because different types of disease require different drugs. Traditional treatments for malaria include quinine, but some parasites have developed resistance to quinine. It is treated with various drugs such as pyrimethamine. Quinine is improved and chloroquine is more effective against some types of ailments.

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