Daily Dispatch

Eight SA researcher­s honoured

- TANYA FARBER

What is in our skin that attracts mosquitoes and spreads malaria – and how can we use that knowledge to keep the little critters away from us?

These are some of the vital questions being answered by one of eight emerging South African researcher­s who last week received one of the highest scientific honours in sub-Saharan Africa.

Madelien Wooding from the University of Pretoria was honoured at the prestigiou­s L’OréalUnesc­o For Women in Science Awards in Nairobi‚ Kenya.

“My research uses analytical chemistry techniques to study insect chemical communicat­ion‚ specifical­ly in mosquitoes responsibl­e for the spread of malaria in South Africa‚ in order to find alternativ­e ways to control the spread of malaria‚” said Wooding.

By exploring chemical compounds on the skin that attract a mosquito to bite a human‚ Wooding hopes to “use this knowledge in the future to develop outdoor mosquito traps” so that fewer humans are bitten.

Another scientist recognised was Charlene Goosen from Stellenbos­ch University. She works in paediatric HIV care and studies the effect of iron supplement­s on the gut health of HIV-positive children.

Goosen said her research could “inform policy makers of the safety of oral iron supplement­ation interventi­ons in HIV from a gut microbial perspectiv­e” for the benefit of vulnerable groups with HIV and malnutriti­on.

Shalena Naidoo‚ another Stellenbos­ch winner whose work focuses on HIV‚ said the lens through which women viewed these problems was “unique on many levels” and their responses would be distinctiv­e too.

Naidoo said the preliminar­y findings of her research “indicate that immune damage caused by the virus in the first few months of life‚ following HIV infection in utero or birth‚ appears to persist”.

Full restoratio­n of immunity did not seem to “reach normality”, and this was linked to other disorders such as cardiovasc­ular and metabolic diseases‚ as well as poor neuro developmen­t.

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