Paul Reiter

Wednesday

2 Dec 2009
The inconvenient truth about malaria
The inconvenient truth about malaria

Al Gore’s film, An Inconvenient Truth, was a masterpiece. Like an elder brother to all humanity, he patiently explained the familiar litany of disasters — droughts, floods, hurricanes, sea-level rise and the rest — spiced with heartrending personal stories: his baby son’s near-fatal accident, the agony of losing a sister to lung cancer. It was a science lecture crafted by Hollywood.In his book — the version for adults, not the one for schoolchildren — he even included a colour photograph of a corpse, a young man, floating face downward, drowned by Hurricane Katrina. I wonder whether the dead boy’s family were consulted.I am a scientist, not a climatologist, so I don’t dabble in climatology. My speciality is the epidemiology of mosquito-borne diseases.

Useful links
  • Advertise with us
  • Sponsor an event
  • Submit a story
More from The Spectator
  • Spectator Australia
  • Apollo Magazine
  • The Spectator Shop
About us
  • About The Spectator
  • Contact & FAQs
  • Privacy & cookies
  • Terms and conditions
  • Jobs and vacancies
  • Site map
Subscribe
  • Subscribe today
  • Sign up to our emails
  • The Spectator Club