Yes. It can... and has...
no because malaria is only transfer ed through mosquitoes... if someone else had malaria and comes back to England with it then yes . There ARE mosquitoes in the UK. They DO NOT carry the malaria parasite.
Malaria is spread by female mosquitoes. The parasite which causes malaria is found in the female mosquitoes saliva. When a person is bitten by a female mosquito, the parasite enters the bloodstream via the mosquitoes saliva. However, there are also other ways for malaria to be spread. A pregnant woman can pass malaria onto her baby. Someone using a needle that has been used by a person with malaria can infect that person. Having a blood transfusion from someone who has malaria can also pass it on to someone else.be careful.
king tuts died of malaria so if you know someone with malaria thats how he died.
check tae to na burabot..
you do not need malaria tablets travel to Sri Lanka unless there is malaria there and if there is malaria there you just take what you think you will need the most like a mosquito net and some malaria tablets and make sure you go to your GP and check on yourself when you are back.
Plasmodium vivax causes malaria. check on Google to be sure though just type Plasmodium causes malaria protist.
Malaria is spread by Mosquitos & Sickle cell is an inherited disease so it would be easier to have an outbreak Malaria.
Malaria is spread from mosquitos and does not transfer from human to human. You can live with someone who has had malaria and not be in any danger. Once a person has malaria they can not give blood and it stays in the body. My dad contacted malaria in WW2 while fighting in the Pacific. He would have symptoms every so often when he was younger, but it got less as he aged. The US military sprayed GI's with DDT to prevent the disease, but most likely that may have caused cancers in later years.
By what know I thought Mosquitos caused malaria? malaria is NOT transmitted through the air. it is a parasite in the bloodstream and is transmitted by mosquitos which have bitten a malaria sufferer..
A person with one sickle cell gene and one normal hemoglobin gene has sickle cell trait, which can provide some protection against malaria. This advantage makes them more capable of surviving in regions where malaria is prevalent compared to someone with no sickle cell genes, who would be more susceptible to severe malaria infection.
very, Well over 300 million people around the world suffer from Malaria and in Africa, someone is bitten every second by a mosquito infected with Malaria. (: