For the first time in decades, people in the United States have caught malaria from mosquitoes in their own communities. Health departments in Florida and Texas reported eight cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention where the individuals had not traveled internationally. This means local mosquitoes picked up the malaria parasite and passed it to people nearby.
The cases serve as a clear signal that the conditions for local transmission exist in parts of the southern U.S. While the total number of cases is small, each one represents a failure of the usual containment measures that have kept malaria from spreading here. We don't know details about the patients' health outcomes from this report.
It's important to understand what this does and doesn't mean. This is not an epidemic, but it is a noteworthy change. For years, nearly all U.S. malaria cases were tied to travel. These eight cases break that pattern, showing the parasite can circulate locally when infected mosquitoes are present. Public health teams are now focused on mosquito control and alerting doctors to test for malaria even in patients who haven't left the country.