Prevention
Prevention of
malaria involves protecting yourself against mosquito
bites and taking antimalarial medications. However, public health officials
strongly recommend that young children and pregnant women avoid traveling to
areas where malaria is common.
The most current information about malaria is available from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health
Organization (WHO). If you are planning international travel, you can learn
about the risk of malaria in that geographic area and the medications
recommended to prevent infection by contacting:
- The CDC at its toll-free
phone number (1-877-394-8747) or Web site
(www.cdc.gov/malaria/travel/index.htm).
- Your doctor or local health department.
Prevent mosquito bites
To prevent mosquito bites, follow these guidelines:
- Limit your outdoor activity between dusk and
dawn. Stay in screened or air-conditioned rooms.
- Wear protective
clothing (long pants and long-sleeved shirts).
- Use insect repellent with DEET (N,N diethylmetatoluamide).
The repellent is available in varying strengths up to 100%. In young children,
use a preparation containing less than 24% strength, because too much of the
chemical can be absorbed through the skin.
- Use bed nets (mosquito netting) sprayed with or soaked in an
insecticide such as permethrin or deltamethrin.
- Use flying-insect
spray indoors around sleeping areas.
- Avoid areas where malaria and
mosquitos are present if you are at higher risk (for example, if you are
pregnant, very young, or very old).
If you use a bed net treated with insecticide and use insect
repellents on your clothes, you will reduce your risk of becoming infected with
malaria. Other steps that may be helpful in reducing the risk of malaria
include using air conditioning and electric fans, wearing protective clothing,
using aerosol insecticides in your house, and taking certain antimalarial
medications.4
Drugs to prevent malaria
The selection of medications to prevent malaria depends on the
geographic region where you may be exposed to malaria
and your health condition (such as being pregnant, being elderly or young,
being sick, or having immunity or resistance to malaria, or having allergies or
sensitivity to the medication).
If you are going to a location where malaria is present, it is
very important to take preventive medicines and to follow the correct schedule
for taking them. The majority of people who become infected with malaria do not
take preventive malaria medicines or do not follow the correct dosing
schedule.
- Medicine to prevent malaria is most effective
if you take the recommended dosage exactly as prescribed and for the length of
time required.
- If you are to take the medicine once a week, take it
on the same day of the week each week.
- Upon returning from an area
where malaria is present, continue the medicine for the recommended length of
time to ensure that all parasites have been eliminated from your body. You will
need to take the medicine for 1 to 4 weeks after returning.
Malaria vaccines
Scientists are studying
malaria vaccines to see whether the vaccines are
effectively preventing malaria infection. To date, there is no strong evidence
that these vaccines are effective.5, 4 Work continues on improving vaccines for preventing
malaria.