What Increases Your Risk
Factors that increase your risk of getting
malaria include:
- Living or traveling in a
country or region where malaria is
present.
- Traveling in an area where malaria is common and:
- Not using preventive medication therapy
before, during, and after travel, or failing to take the medicine
correctly.
- Being outdoors, especially in rural areas, between dusk
and dawn (nighttime), when the mosquitoes that transmit malaria are most
active.
- Not taking steps to
protect yourself from mosquito bites.
Your risk of getting malaria depends on your age, history of
exposure to malaria, and whether you are pregnant.3
Most adults who have lived in areas where malaria is present have developed
partial immunity to malaria because of previous infections and therefore almost
never develop severe disease. However, young children who live in these areas
and travelers to these areas are especially at risk for malaria because they
have not developed this immunity.
Pregnant women are more likely than nonpregnant women
to get severe malaria, because the immune system is suppressed during
pregnancy.3
In addition, pregnant women,
young
children, older adults, and people with other health problems are more
likely to have serious complications if they get malaria.
You can take measures to reduce the risk of malaria if you live in
areas where the disease is present, or if you are traveling in these areas.
Malaria is more severe in people who have had their spleen removed
(splenectomy).