Malaria Killed Half the People Who Have Ever Lived myth


Did Malaria Killed Half the People Who Have Ever Lived?

Did Malaria Really Kill Half of Everyone Who Ever Lived?

Malaria would have needed to kill an average of about 5 ½ million people a year to kill half of everyone who ever lived: we don’t have data to prove that it did this. However, we do know that almost half the world’s population is at risk of Malaria, and it kills up to a million a year today despite modern medicine, primarily in Africa. This means the general concept that “Malaria is one of the biggest killers of humans throughout history” is spot on, but specific claims related to this are at best estimates. We explore the logic below.

This video discuses the history of Malaria deaths.

FACT: Malaria death tolls are nothing like what they used to be, but did you know we still don’t have a malaria vaccine? Although progress has been made in the last ten years toward developing malaria vaccines, there is currently no effective worldwide malaria vaccine on the market. Learn more at the CDC.

Malaria and Mortality Rates Throughout History

We know from written works that malaria or a disease resembling malaria has been noted for more than 4,000 years.[1] However, the first evidence of malaria parasites was found in mosquitoes preserved in amber from the Paleocene period that are approximately 30 million years old.[5] We can thus reasonably speculate Malaria has existed throughout human evolution.

We can then guess that around 110 billion humans have lived over the past 52,000 years, that means that around 50 billion would have needed to have died from Malaria, a rate of very roughly 5 ½ million per year from 800 BC to 1900 AD, for this factoid to be true. We only have reliable data on deaths from 1900 until present.[2]

TIP: A commenter correctly pointed out, “it is noteworthy to include the fact that the modern humans lived in only in Africa (where Malaria is prevalent) for much of history. Homo sapiens emerged in Africa about 200,000 years ago, spread across Eurasia 60,000 years ago, and migrated to Americas 10,000 years ago.”

Malaria and Mortality Rates in the 20th Century

According to “The World Health Report 1999” (WHO) “during the first half of the 20th century, the world sustained around 2 million deaths from malaria each year”. Those deaths were mostly children in the Middle East, through the Indian subcontinent and South-East Asia, to the islands of the Western Pacific, including those of Indonesia and the Philippines. This rate of 2 million deaths a year occurred despite the disease being preventable and treatable in the west.

This video explains Malaria deaths and preventive efforts in the 2000s.

Malaria and Mortality Rates Since 2000

Today somewhere between 300,000 and 1 million people a year die from Malaria. [3][4] More than 40 percent of the world’s population lives in malaria-risk areas.[4]

About 3.2 billion people – almost half of the world’s population – are at risk of malaria. In 2013, there were about 198 million malaria cases (with an uncertainty range of 124 million to 283 million) and an estimated 584 000 malaria deaths (with an uncertainty range of 367 000 to 755 000).[3]

According to the 2014 WHO report “It is estimated that, globally, 670 million fewer cases and 4.3 million fewer malaria deaths occurred between 2001 and 2013 than would have occurred had incidence and mortality rates remained unchanged since 2000.”[4]

Given the actual death rate, averted case, and the current world population, it’s likely that Malaria killed less than half of all people who ever lived, despite the evidence that it could easily have been one of the leading causes of death throughout human history.

Increased prevention and control measures have led to a reduction in malaria mortality rates by 47% globally since 2000 and by 54% in the WHO African Region.[4]

Conclusion

The factoid is close to true, but, at the end of the day, it is too much of a guesstimate/generalization to be declared a fact. While we don’t know exactly how many died from Malaria throughout history, we can safely say, “Malaria could have potentially killed nearly to half the people who ever lived, predominantly children”.


References

  1. The History of Malaria, an Ancient Disease“. Cdc.gov. Retrieved Sept 29, 2015.
  2. Malaria Killed Half the People Who Have Ever Lived“. Rdparasites.blogspot.com. Retrieved Sept 29, 2015. This source cite’s Carl Haub, of the Population Reference Bureau for data on world population.
  3. World Health Report 1999“. Who.int. Retrieved Sept 29, 2015.
  4. World Health Report 2014”. Who.int. Retrieved Sept 29, 2015.
  5. History of Malaria“. Wikipedia.org. Retrieved Sept 29. 2915.

Author: Thomas DeMichele

Thomas DeMichele is the content creator behind ObamaCareFacts.com, FactMyth.com, CryptocurrencyFacts.com, and other DogMediaSolutions.com and Massive Dog properties. He also contributes to MakerDAO and other cryptocurrency-based projects. Tom's focus in all...

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Zachary_Simmons Did not vote.

This World Mosquito Day help us continue our mission for a malaria-free world, where no child dies from a mosquito bite. On the 20 August of 1897, Sir Ronald Ross discovered that female mosquitoes transmit malaria between humans. Since then, we’ve followed it’s devastating effect. In fact, it’s said to have killed half the people that ever lived – 54 billion people. Despite huge progress in the fight against our deadliest enemy, global efforts have now stalled and, for the first time, we’re seeing malaria rising in the highest burden countries. We can’t let this happen. Together, we can be the generation that ends malaria for good. 

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Nick den Uijl Supports this as a Fact.

This passage troubles me a bit: ” We can then guess that around 110 billion humans have lived over the past 52,000 years, that means that around 50 billion would have needed to have died from Malaria, a rate of very roughly 5 ½ million per year from 800 BC to 1900 AD, for this factoid to be true.”
Why specifically 800 BC?
Why the sudden reduction of 52,000 years to 2700 years?
If 5.5 million people died per year from malaria, between 800 BC to 1900 AD, that would still make “only” 14,9 billion people. But if 5,5 million people died per year from malaria during a 52,000 years period, that would make 286 billion people. That is more than was guessed to have lived during that period.
What did I read wrong?

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Nick den Uijl Did not vote.

I do not “support this as a fact”; I simply could not figure out how to submit a comment. Also I am not happy about the use of my picture, without my explicit consent.

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David Wozniak Supports this as a Fact.

And that is why they gave me malaria pills in the Navy. Now if I would only get a flue shot!

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will suh Did not vote.

Also it is noteworthy to include the fact that the modern humans lived in only in Africa (where Malaria is prevalent) for much of history. Homo sapiens emerged in Africa about 200,000 years ago, spread across Eurasia 60,000 years ago, and migrated to Americas 10,000 years ago.

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will suh Did not vote.

In addition to the above, P. falciparum (the most virulent and fatal form of malaria) occurs only in sub saharan africa, while malaria strains found outside Africa such as P. vivax are much milder.

Malaria alone was able to exert enough selection pressure upon human population to evolve sickle cell trait, and 25% of Africans carry sickle cell gene. This high prevalence was the result even DESPITE the potentially fatal complications of sickle cell anemia, means that the disease even forced our specie to evolve a fatally disadvantageous trait in order to resist it. All this is a testament to the unprecedented numbers of humans that Malaria may have killed.

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