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South Africa's health department urges vigilance amid rising malaria cases

IANS April 17, 2025 321 views

The South African Health Department has issued a critical alert about rising malaria cases in several provinces and neighboring countries. Travelers during the Easter holiday are at increased risk of potential cross-border disease transmission. Healthcare providers have been instructed to remain vigilant, conduct thorough testing, and inquire about patients' travel histories. The department emphasizes early detection, prevention, and immediate medical attention as key strategies to control potential malaria outbreaks.

"Early diagnosis and treatment are critical to saving lives and preventing further transmission of the disease." - Foster Mohale, Health Department Spokesperson"
South Africa's health department urges vigilance amid rising malaria cases
Johannesberg, April 17: The South African Department of Health has urged the public to remain vigilant against malaria as the country is seeing a slight increase in cases of the disease, particularly in malaria-endemic provinces such as Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and KwaZulu-Natal.

Key Points

1

Health officials warn of malaria transmission risk across Southern African regions

2

Easter travel increases potential cross-border disease spread

3

Travelers advised to take preventive medication and monitor symptoms

4

Key provinces at risk include Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and KwaZulu-Natal

The department said on Wednesday that it has also noted malaria outbreaks in some neighbouring countries within the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region, mainly in Botswana, Eswatini, Namibia, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe, Xinhua news agency reported.

"This poses a threat of possible cross-border transmission of this preventable disease, especially as people travel across the region to various destinations for religious and cultural reasons as part of Easter holidays," department spokesperson Foster Mohale said in a statement.

He said the department will remain on high alert in case of a sudden peak in local malaria transmission.

"The healthcare providers in both endemic and non-endemic provinces have been alerted to maintain a high index of suspicion for malaria in patients with flu-like symptoms and report confirmed cases immediately to support malaria surveillance and response," Mohale added.

"They were also reminded to always inquire about travel history, particularly from high-risk regions, and conduct prompt malaria testing and repeat the tests if symptoms persist despite negative results," the spokesperson added.

"Early diagnosis and treatment are critical to saving lives and preventing further transmission of the disease."

"The Department will remain on high alert in case of sudden peak in malaria local transmission. The disease is primarily transmitted through a bite of an infected female mosquito called Anopheline. Common symptoms include fever, chills, headache, muscle pain, nausea and loss of appetite or vomiting. Therefore, anyone who experiences any of the symptoms should present at the nearest healthcare facility."

According to the statement, malaria is primarily transmitted through the bite of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes.

Common symptoms include fever, chills, headache, muscle pain, nausea, loss of appetite, and vomiting.

The health department advised people travelling during the Easter holidays to take malaria prevention medication, such as doxycycline, which is freely available at all public health facilities.

If any symptoms arise, individuals are encouraged to seek immediate medical attention and always inform healthcare providers of their recent travel history, it added.

Reader Comments

T
Thandi M.
This is so important! My cousin got malaria last year after visiting family in Limpopo. The symptoms came on so fast - we almost didn't recognize it in time. Please everyone, take those prevention meds seriously 🙏
J
James K.
I appreciate the health department being proactive about this. But I wish there was more public education in rural areas where people might not have access to regular news updates. Maybe radio announcements would help?
L
Lebo P.
Traveling to Mozambique next week for Easter. Thanks for the reminder to get my doxycycline! Better safe than sorry 😷
S
Sipho D.
The cross-border transmission risk is real. We need better coordination between SADC countries on disease surveillance. Malaria doesn't care about borders!
N
Nomsa T.
Good info, but the article repeats the symptoms twice. Could be more concise. Otherwise helpful warning for holiday travelers! Stay safe everyone 💊

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