Liver failure and kidney failure
Destruction of blood cells (hemolytic anemia)
Meningitis
Rupture of the spleen and subsequent massive hemorrhage
Mosquitoes don't cause anaemia, but they do carry the malaria parasite which can cause anaemia. Therefore, if you are bitten by a mosquito that is carrying malaria and get infected, you may develop anaemia (with other symptoms of malaria).
That is not possible. It may take up to six months to develop the immunity. Falciparum malaria will kill you very shortly. You have to take treatment for malaria.
There are vaccines for malaria. There are also vaccines for Tetanus and Chicken Pox.
it helps the fever when you come down with malaria, also as a preventable source for malaria as well.
They don't.
there is no cure for malaria, however, it can be treated with doses of quinine, also to be used as a preventive measure.
malaria
Malaria parasites become resistant to drugs used to treat them. Also the mosquitoes which carry the parasites also become resistant to insecticide drugs which are used to kill them. This process is occurring in malaria hotspots worldwide.
Information on the symptoms of malaria can be found on the following websites: Mmv, Malariaconsortium and Blackhealthonline. A doctor or pharmacist would also have information on malaria symptoms.
because there are different number of species with different effects that they can cause, therefore it is harder to develop a vaccine for it
some strains of Plasmodium have become resistant to antimalarial drugs, and medical researchers have stepped up efforts to develop a malaria vaccine. In early 1997, researchers reported encouraging results
The most common disease was "Roman" malaria, a particularly virulent form on malaria. Typhoid was also common.