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History and Current Status of Malaria in Korea

Cited 10 time in Web of Science Cited 10 time in Scopus
Authors

Chai, Jong-Yil

Issue Date
2020-09
Publisher
Korean Society of Infectious Diseases; Korean Society for Antimicrobial Therapy
Citation
Infection and Chemotherapy, Vol.52 No.3, pp.441-452
Abstract
Vivax malaria which had been highly prevalent in Korea disappeared rapidly from the 1960s to 1984 when domestic occurrence of cases stopped. However, malaria reemerged in 1993 near the demilitarized zone (DMZ) bordering with North Korea. The number of patients thereafter increased exponentially year after year totaling 35,526 cases by the end of 2015. A small number of cases (1 - 53 patients annually) also occurred among the United States military personnel camping in Korea. However, after the 2010s the number of annual malaria cases has been decreasing slowly in Korea. Several reports on malaria situation in North Korea described high malaria prevalence after 1997 which peaked during 1999 - 2002 and has been decreasing thereafter. At the beginning of the reemergence, the majority of cases (60 - 90%) were soldiers aged 20-25 years camping around the northern parts of Gyeonggi-do and Gangwon-do (Province), Korea just facing the DMZ. However, as the outbreak continued more civilians were infected. The course of illness was relatively mild, and chemotherapy with chloroquine in combination with primaquine was successful in most of the patients. Mass chemoprophylaxis combined with mosquito control activities greatly contributed to the decline of malaria situation among Korean military soldiers.
ISSN
2093-2340
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/177914
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3947/ic.2020.52.3.441
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