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Malaria
Publications and Materials
Below are
selected publications and materials related to malaria. Please note the
year of publication may be later than the year(s) the data represent.
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2005 Publications and Materials
2004 Publications and Materials
Related
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2005 Publications and Materials
Pregnancy,
Travel, and Malaria: A Cautionary Tale (10/30/05)
http://www.cdc.gov/Malaria/features/malaria_travel_pregnancy.htm
All travelers to malaria-risk areas should take precautions against this
dangerous mosquito-borne disease. Pregnant women who are at especially
high risk should avoid traveling to malaria-risk areas if at all possible.
If a pregnant woman must travel to a malaria-risk area, she should make
sure to take all necessary precautions (including antimalaria pills) against
malaria.
Congenital
Malaria- Nassau County, New York, 2004 (5/30/05)
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5415a3.htm
PDF (p. 383)
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5415.pdf
This report describes the first documented case of congenital malaria
acquired in Nassau County, New York, which is the fifth case of congenital
malaria reported in the United States since 2000. Health-care providers
should consider malaria as a diagnosis in neonates and young infants,
particularly those with fever, whose mothers emigrated from areas where
malaria is endemic.
2004 Publications and Materials
Malaria during Pregnancy
(9/30/04)
http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/pregnancy.htm
Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to malaria. In areas where
malaria is common, health ministries now strive to make malaria prevention
part of normal antenatal care. Infection with P. falciparum during
pregnancy increases the mother’s risk of developing severe disease and
anemia, and increases the risk of stillbirth and prematurity.
Maternal
Malaria and Perinatal HIV Transmission, Western Kenya (3/30/04)
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol10no4/03-0303.htm
This evaluation of perinatal HIV transmission in a malarious area of
western Kenya demonstrated that approximately 20% of infants born to
HIV-infected mothers acquired HIV by 4 months of age, similar to rates
reported in other sub-Saharan African settings. Consistent with other
studies, maternal viral load in peripheral blood at the time of delivery
and having an episiotomy or perineal tear were risk factors for perinatal
mother-to-child HIV transmission (MTCT). Women with placental malaria had
lower rates of perinatal MTCT than women without placental malaria.
However, women with high-density malaria had significantly higher rates of
perinatal MTCT than parasitemic women with low-density malaria. Malaria
during pregnancy is a serious problem in sub-Saharan Africa, affecting an
estimated 24 million pregnant women; malaria prevalence may exceed 50%
among primigravid and secundigravid women in malaria-endemic areas.
Malaria: Women’s Health
Topics A-Z
http://www.cdc.gov/women/az/malaria.htm
View women’s health resources related to malaria.
Malaria
http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/
Learn more about malaria.
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last reviewed
January 11,
2006
URL: http://www.cdc.gov/women/pubs/malaria.htm
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