Four people in south China's Guangdong Province who have recently returned
from south Asia have contracted malaria, said an official with the
provincial Inspection and Quarantine Bureau (IQB).
The four workers, who all belong to an enterprise in Shunde City
whose name the official declined to reveal, are in hospital. One of
them is in critical condition.
They worked in south Asia in April and May and, since getting
home in September, have been suffering from fever, diarrhea, skin
rashes and dizziness.
All of them were bitten by mosquitoes.
Malaria is one of the world's most common diseases, caused by a
parasite that is transmitted to humans by a female mosquito's bite.
Malaria symptoms include fever, shivering, pain in the joints,
headache, repeated vomiting, generalized convulsions and coma. If
not treated, the most serious types of malaria can prove fatal in
as little as two days. Malaria parasites weaken the immune system,
making people more vulnerable to other infectious, life-threatening
diseases.
The workers are quarantined and the IQB has launched a campaign
to exterminate mosquitoes in the province.
Guangdong has also reported 492 dengue cases, with no
deaths.
Infectious diseases accounted for 59 percent of the 11,109
public health emergencies in September, according to an earlier
report from the State Health Ministry.
(Xinhua News Agency October 20, 2006)