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MALARIA CONCERNS REDUCED
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Press Release   
OCTOBER 21st, 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: TIM O’CONNOR
PHONE:561-355-3576
FAX:561- 355-3038


    PALM BEACH COUNTY, FL---The Palm Beach County Health Department announced today that the malaria outbreak should be over. During the past three months eight people have acquired the disease locally. However, the county remains under an alert for other mosquito borne disease like West Nile Virus.

    Health Department Director Jean Malecki, MD, said, “We have carefully evaluated the eight cases of locally acquired malaria. Science tells us that the onset of symptoms is generally from 7 to 30 days and the life span of an infected Anopholes mosquito is about two weeks. We have had no new cases since September 19 and I feel we may have reached the end of this outbreak.”

    Malecki added that people should continue to protect themselves from mosquito bites by wearing long sleeves and pants from dusk to dawn and using an insect repellant containing DEET according to the manufacturers recommendation.

    There have been 20 small outbreaks of locally acquired mosquito transmitted malaria since 1970 when it was certified as eradicated in the United States. The most recent outbreak was the eight cases acquired this summer in the Lake Worth area of the county.

    Malaria is characterized by high fever, headache, loss of appetite, vomiting and teeth chattering chills. Transmission occurs when a mosquito bites a person carrying malaria and that mosquito passes it along to another individual. All eight cases this summer were the same strain called Plasmodium vivax and through molecular typing were confirmed to be from the same source.

    The mosquito borne disease alert will be lifted when scientific evidence confirms that West Nile Virus is no longer present within the county and surrounding areas.

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For more information, reporters may contact:
Public Relations,  Tim O’Connor
email: feedback
Phone: (561) 355-3576 
FAX:    (561) 355-3038
Press Releases for 2003

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