Local Malaria Cases Have Been Confirmed in the US—Should I Be Worried?

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At least four people in Florida and one in Texas have been diagnosed with malaria that they must have caught near where they live—because, according to health officials, none of them traveled outside the US or their own states. The very unusual discovery has left infectious disease specialists wondering: Who else might be ill, and will local doctors recognize what’s wrong?

Malaria isn’t completely unprecedented in the US: About 2,000 residents contract it every year, but almost always because they traveled to a place where it’s endemic, were bitten by an infected mosquito there, and fell ill once they came home. Locally acquired malaria is extremely rare. It arises from a chain of transmission that probably starts with a US mosquito biting a tourist, migrant, or refugee who has been in an endemic country and is carrying the infection in their blood. Then the insect passes it along by biting someone else. That hasn’t occurred in the US since 2003.

There are roughly 247 million cases of malaria in the world each year, according to the World Health Organization, and in each one a mosquito is only the vector. Humans are the disease’s natural host; mosquitoes transport it between people. (Unlike with COVID and some other diseases, animals don’t play a role.) So when experts learn someone has been diagnosed and can be confident that person hasn’t traveled, their first impulse is to ask, “Who else was infected but has not been found?”

“If there are five cases right now, that means there’s got to be a lot more mosquitoes out there that are infected,” says Ross Boyce, a physician and assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine who runs a malaria research program in Uganda. “And there may even be more people that are infected than we know about at this point.”

The five people identified by health authorities, in Sarasota County on Florida’s west coast and Cameron County at the southernmost tip of Texas, have already received treatment and are recovering, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In both areas mosquitoes have been trapped and analyzed, and mosquito-control districts are spraying insecticide to knock down local populations.

Those are familiar actions in parts of the US because they were key to defending against the epidemic of Zika that swept through North and South America in 2016 and landed in Brownsville, Texas, within Cameron County, late that year. Florida has been combating outbreaks of dengue, another mosquito-borne virus, for more than a decade, after it appeared in Key West and then moved north to Miami.

But malaria hasn’t been persistently present in the US since it was eliminated here in 1951, in a campaign that gave rise to the CDC. (The agency was originally called the Office of Malaria Control in War Areas, tasked with reducing the disease’s impact on soldiers headed to World War II battlefields and bases producing tanks and ships.) Thus malaria experts worry that doctors, especially primary care physicians, may not know it when they see it.

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