Global Times

Italian doctors baffled after malaria kills 4-year-old

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A 4-year-old girl has died from malaria after apparently contractin­g the disease in Italy in a case that has perplexed the medical world, doctors said Tuesday.

“I’ve never seen a case like it, it’s a mystery. It shouldn’t have been possible for her to get malaria,” Claudio Paternoste­r, head of the infectious diseases department at the Santa Chiara hospital in Trento, northern Italy, told AFP.

The girl, named as Sofia Zago by the media, had not traveled to any at-risk countries but had spent her summer holiday with her family at the seaside in Italy’s Veneto region.

She had then been admitted for other health reasons to the paediatric department of the Santa Chiara, where she had come into contact with two children who had picked up malaria during a trip to Burkina Faso in Africa.

“But only some types of mosquito are able to transmit the disease from person to person, and they don’t exist in Italy,” said Paternoste­r, who was called to consult on Zago’s case over the weekend.

While there are a few cases of malaria in Italy a year, “they are so-called ‘suitcase’ cases, where someone has brought an infected mosquito back with them from Africa,” he said.

Zago was diagnosed with malaria on Saturday and transferre­d to intensive care, but rapidly deteriorat­ed on Sunday.

“It was a very hot summer and with climate change we cannot rule out the adaptation of some species [of mosquito] or the re-introducti­on of others” which could transmit the disease, Paternoste­r said.

Malaria was rife in Italy in the 19th century, particular­ly in the center of the country, the south and on its islands.

But after mass draining of marshlands and the widespread use of the medicine quinine, by 1962 the country was declared malaria-free.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, there were 212 million cases of malaria worldwide in 2015, and 429,000 deaths.

Ninety percent of malaria cases and deaths occur in Africa. Children under the age of five are most at risk.

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