logo
Two more cases of malaria detected in Queensland, brings infection total to 71

Two more cases of malaria detected in Queensland, brings infection total to 71

West Australian04-06-2025
An outbreak of a potentially fatal disease continues in the Sunshine State as authorities race to investigate two more locally acquired cases, bringing the total number of infections this year to 71.
Queensland Health confirmed a second locally acquired infection was recently identified in the Torres Strait Islands local government area.
Ninety-seven per cent of the cases this year to date have come from overseas, predominantly Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands.
It is a major increase in numbers, with 69 infections recorded in the same period in 2024, 50 in 2023, 20 in 2022 and only four in 2021.
The presence of floodwaters is believed to be a key reason for the spike.
Malaria is preventable and curable, and is not able to be passed from person to person, but rather spread through the bites of some infected Anopheles mosquitoes.
'We don't have mosquitoes capable of passing malaria on all throughout the country, but certainly in the more tropical parts of our country, the Northern Territory and northern parts of Queensland,' Mater Health infectious diseases director Paul Griffin said.
'That's why in those areas we need to give people that advice to make sure we reduce the chance of local transmission.
'With more significant types of malaria, the severe consequences can be involvement of the brain, so cerebral malaria and even death,' he told ABC News.
'It is something that we do need to take seriously and make sure we take steps to limit how much it is able to be passed on in our country.'
According to the World Health Organisation, the most common early symptoms of malaria are fever, headache and chills.
They typically start within 10 to 15 days of getting bitten by an infected mosquito.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike
Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike

Queensland doctors, police officers and customer service workers have struck a deal for higher pay with the state government, while nurses, teachers and firefighters prepare to escalate their efforts to secure better wages. On Sunday, the Crisafulli government announced it had reached in-principle agreement with Queensland Health's 15,000-strong medical officer workforce, comprised of junior and senior doctors, registrars and specialists working across emergency departments, specialist wards and ambulance services. The deal, which health minister Tim Nicholls said was subject to member approval, secures an 8 per cent increase over three years, along with guaranteed cost of living provisions should the CPI rate rise above the state government wages policy. It also offers a new career medical officer classification, an increased attraction and retention allowance for rural generalists and an increase in overnight allowances. Secretary of public sector union Together, Alex Scott, said inflation figures released on Wednesday painted the offer in a favourable light. Loading '[Those figures] show that the current wages offer ... is higher than inflation,' he said. 'In terms of our ability to consider whether or not our members are better off under collective agreements or not, having a wage offer that is above inflation is fundamentally important to us.' Nicholls said an agreement had also been reached with staff of the newly formed Customer Services, Open Data and Small and Family Business (CDSB), and Queensland Police Service's Protective Services officers.

Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike
Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike

The Age

time2 days ago

  • The Age

Doctors reach wage agreement while other public sector workers prepare to strike

Queensland doctors, police officers and customer service workers have struck a deal for higher pay with the state government, while nurses, teachers and firefighters prepare to escalate their efforts to secure better wages. On Sunday, the Crisafulli government announced it had reached in-principle agreement with Queensland Health's 15,000-strong medical officer workforce, comprised of junior and senior doctors, registrars and specialists working across emergency departments, specialist wards and ambulance services. The deal, which health minister Tim Nicholls said was subject to member approval, secures an 8 per cent increase over three years, along with guaranteed cost of living provisions should the CPI rate rise above the state government wages policy. It also offers a new career medical officer classification, an increased attraction and retention allowance for rural generalists and an increase in overnight allowances. Secretary of public sector union Together, Alex Scott, said inflation figures released on Wednesday painted the offer in a favourable light. Loading '[Those figures] show that the current wages offer ... is higher than inflation,' he said. 'In terms of our ability to consider whether or not our members are better off under collective agreements or not, having a wage offer that is above inflation is fundamentally important to us.' Nicholls said an agreement had also been reached with staff of the newly formed Customer Services, Open Data and Small and Family Business (CDSB), and Queensland Police Service's Protective Services officers.

Qld vaccination rates lowest in nation as double hit of Ekka and flu peak near
Qld vaccination rates lowest in nation as double hit of Ekka and flu peak near

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Qld vaccination rates lowest in nation as double hit of Ekka and flu peak near

Health officials fear a surge in flu cases and hospitalisations ahead of the Ekka will add further pressure to the state's health system, as new data showed Queensland has the worst vaccination rates in the country. Less than 28 per cent of Queenslanders are currently vaccinated against the flu, with the latest Queensland Health data showing 90 per cent of the nearly 44,000 cases this year were unvaccinated. Of the nearly 4300 people hospitalised this year with the flu, 86 per cent were unvaccinated. Queensland Chief Health Officer Dr Catherine McDougall said cases and hospitalisations had steadily risen over recent weeks, with the highest number of flu cases (3,902) recorded in a single week for the year to date between July 21 and 27. Loading 'It's concerning that less than 28 per cent (27.1 per cent or 1.65 million) of Queenslanders are vaccinated against flu,' McDougall said. 'Most people being hospitalised for flu currently are not vaccinated – and this is increasing demand on our hospitals.' An average of 200 public hospital beds per day are currently occupied by flu patients, with almost half over the age of 65. Queensland Health Director-General Dr David Rosengren told budget estimates on Friday Queensland's vaccination rates were the lowest in the country.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store