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Award: Musketeer of the Year, Quiz Whiz of the Year (2011)
Joined: Tue Dec 23, 2008 5:22 am
Posts: 19076
Location: Midway between the infinite and the infinitesimal! Award: Musketeer of the Year, Quiz Whiz of the Year (2012) |
CarlaLo, this might not be what you want to hear but:
The recommendations are that no pregnant woman should put her unborn foetus at risk by entering a high-risk (or even low-risk) malarial area, In other words, if you don't have to go to such an area, DON'T!
The reason for this is that, should you contract malaria, both the disease and the medications used for treating the disease, can harm your child. If I was pregnant - and that is one of the most unlikely events in the universe - I would not risk it at all. If you had to contract malaria and your baby was harmed as a result, you would never forgive yourself!
The WHOLE of Kruger - from north to south, east to west, southwest to north-east, northwest to south-east - all of the Park is officially a high-risk malarial area from the beginning of October to the end of May. There are slight variations in risk - based on rainfall, heat, the amount of water and/or stagnant pools close by, and other factors - but the risk is universally high throughout Kruger over this time.
Mid-October may still be a lower risk than later in the summer, but this depends mainly on the rainfall, and it is unlikely that rain will not have fallen by then. If you chose to go into Kruger in mid-October, you would be shouldering the responsibility entirely for your foetus.
What you COULD CONSIDER DOING is to stay outside the Park in a suitable area, and then commute daily into the Park. Some areas, relatively close to Kruger, are low-risk areas all year round (such as Hazyview, White River, Nelspruit, Thohoyandou) and the official recommendations are non-drug measures without the official need for antimalarial drugs. However, remember that you are pregnant, so a low-risk area does not mean a no-risk area!
Other areas, such as Sabie and Pilgrim's Rest, have such a low risk of contracting malaria to be deemed non-risk malarial areas. You could stay in a non-risk malarial area during the night and commute to Kruger in the day.
The reason for your relative safety from contracting malaria in such areas is that the female anopheles mosquito - which carries the malaria (the male is useless in this regard ) - only bites from dusk until dawn, with a peak-biting range usually between dusk and midnight, and again from about an hour before dawn until sunrise.
Therefore, if you were in Kruger between sunrise and a little before dusk, the female anopheles mosquito is not yet active. As long as you drive back to your non-malarial area from Kruger with windows up (that is if it is after dusk), then you should be almost entirely safe from contracting the disease.
[The only times that people who live in a non-malarial area really contract the disease is if a female anopheles mosquito is trapped in their car, clothing, or bags when they entered a malarial area, and she both is a carrier of malaria (not all mosquitoes do) and she bites and infects you. Therefore, these last events appear to be very rare.]Disclaimer: My recommendations here - though based on some experience and some drug knowledge - are not absolute, and further consultation with suitable health-care professionals is suggested before a final decision is taken on whether to enter a malarial area, what prophylaxis to use, and any general factors and limitations that need to be taken into account. Furthermore, I only advise based on what information is given by the person(s) entering the malarial area, but I have no control on the information given to me, and so such information could possibly be incomplete or misleading.
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Last edited by onewithnature on Tue Sep 20, 2011 6:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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