I IMAGINE yourself living your dream, on safari in Africa, when you begin to feel ill: fever, chills, aches and pains, headache. Is it “just a flu,” or something more ominous, like . . . malaria?
Malaria is nothing to scoff at. Although eradicated from most developed countries, it infects 300 – 500 million people each year worldwide, and kills more than a million, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. About 12,000 American tourists contracted malaria between 1985 and 2002, two-thirds of them in Africa. Of the resulting 76 fatalities, three-quarters were caused by the most virulent strain, Plasmodium falciparum.
Malaria was first described in China more than 4,000 years ago. The name originated in Medieval Italian, mala (bad) and aria (air) , reflecting the long-held belief that the disease was caused…
