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Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic

BACKGROUND: Malaria represents a huge burden for the health care services across Africa. Describing malaria attending health services contributes to quantify the burden and describe the epidemiology and clinical presentation. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of data collected through the Manhiça morb...

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Autores principales: Guinovart, Caterina, Bassat, Quique, Sigaúque, Betuel, Aide, Pedro, Sacarlal, Jahit, Nhampossa, Tacilta, Bardají, Azucena, Nhacolo, Ariel, Macete, Eusébio, Mandomando, Inácio, Aponte, John J, Menéndez, Clara, Alonso, Pedro L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2268704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18302770
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-36
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author Guinovart, Caterina
Bassat, Quique
Sigaúque, Betuel
Aide, Pedro
Sacarlal, Jahit
Nhampossa, Tacilta
Bardají, Azucena
Nhacolo, Ariel
Macete, Eusébio
Mandomando, Inácio
Aponte, John J
Menéndez, Clara
Alonso, Pedro L
author_facet Guinovart, Caterina
Bassat, Quique
Sigaúque, Betuel
Aide, Pedro
Sacarlal, Jahit
Nhampossa, Tacilta
Bardají, Azucena
Nhacolo, Ariel
Macete, Eusébio
Mandomando, Inácio
Aponte, John J
Menéndez, Clara
Alonso, Pedro L
author_sort Guinovart, Caterina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Malaria represents a huge burden for the health care services across Africa. Describing malaria attending health services contributes to quantify the burden and describe the epidemiology and clinical presentation. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of data collected through the Manhiça morbidity surveillance system (Mozambique) on all paediatric visits (<15 years) to the outpatient clinic from June 2003 to May 2005. Age-specific minimum community-based incidence rates (MCBIRs) of malaria were calculated using demographic surveillance system data. Malaria was defined as fever or history of fever in the preceding 24 hours with asexual Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia of any density in the blood smear. RESULTS: A total of 94,941 outpatient visits were seen during the study period, of which 30.5% had malaria. Children younger than three years accounted for almost half of the total malaria cases and children aged ≥ 5 years represented 36.4% of the cases. Among children who presented with malaria, 56.7% had fever and among children who presented with fever or a history of fever only 37.2% had malaria. The geometric mean parasitaemia in malaria cases was 8582.2 parasites/μL, peaking in children aged two to three years. 13% of malaria cases had a PCV<25% and the mean PCV in malaria cases increased gradually with age, ranging from 27.8% in children aged 2–12 months to 34.4% in ≥ 5 years. The percentage of cases admitted or transferred showed a clear decreasing trend with age. MCBIRs of outpatient malaria per 1,000 child years at risk for the whole study period were of 394 in infants, 630 in children aged 1 to <5 years and 237 in children aged five years or more. A clustering of the cases was observed, whereby most children never had malaria, some had a few episodes and very few had many episodes. CONCLUSION: Preventive measures should be targeted at children younger than three years, as they carry the highest burden of malaria. Children aged 5–15 years represent around a third of the malaria cases and should also be included in control programmes. Concern should be raised about presumptive treatment of fever cases with artemisinin-combination therapies, as many children will, according to IMCI guidelines, receive treatment unnecessarily.
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spelling pubmed-22687042008-03-18 Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic Guinovart, Caterina Bassat, Quique Sigaúque, Betuel Aide, Pedro Sacarlal, Jahit Nhampossa, Tacilta Bardají, Azucena Nhacolo, Ariel Macete, Eusébio Mandomando, Inácio Aponte, John J Menéndez, Clara Alonso, Pedro L Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Malaria represents a huge burden for the health care services across Africa. Describing malaria attending health services contributes to quantify the burden and describe the epidemiology and clinical presentation. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of data collected through the Manhiça morbidity surveillance system (Mozambique) on all paediatric visits (<15 years) to the outpatient clinic from June 2003 to May 2005. Age-specific minimum community-based incidence rates (MCBIRs) of malaria were calculated using demographic surveillance system data. Malaria was defined as fever or history of fever in the preceding 24 hours with asexual Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia of any density in the blood smear. RESULTS: A total of 94,941 outpatient visits were seen during the study period, of which 30.5% had malaria. Children younger than three years accounted for almost half of the total malaria cases and children aged ≥ 5 years represented 36.4% of the cases. Among children who presented with malaria, 56.7% had fever and among children who presented with fever or a history of fever only 37.2% had malaria. The geometric mean parasitaemia in malaria cases was 8582.2 parasites/μL, peaking in children aged two to three years. 13% of malaria cases had a PCV<25% and the mean PCV in malaria cases increased gradually with age, ranging from 27.8% in children aged 2–12 months to 34.4% in ≥ 5 years. The percentage of cases admitted or transferred showed a clear decreasing trend with age. MCBIRs of outpatient malaria per 1,000 child years at risk for the whole study period were of 394 in infants, 630 in children aged 1 to <5 years and 237 in children aged five years or more. A clustering of the cases was observed, whereby most children never had malaria, some had a few episodes and very few had many episodes. CONCLUSION: Preventive measures should be targeted at children younger than three years, as they carry the highest burden of malaria. Children aged 5–15 years represent around a third of the malaria cases and should also be included in control programmes. Concern should be raised about presumptive treatment of fever cases with artemisinin-combination therapies, as many children will, according to IMCI guidelines, receive treatment unnecessarily. BioMed Central 2008-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2268704/ /pubmed/18302770 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-36 Text en Copyright © 2008 Guinovart et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Guinovart, Caterina
Bassat, Quique
Sigaúque, Betuel
Aide, Pedro
Sacarlal, Jahit
Nhampossa, Tacilta
Bardají, Azucena
Nhacolo, Ariel
Macete, Eusébio
Mandomando, Inácio
Aponte, John J
Menéndez, Clara
Alonso, Pedro L
Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title_full Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title_fullStr Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title_full_unstemmed Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title_short Malaria in rural Mozambique. Part I: Children attending the outpatient clinic
title_sort malaria in rural mozambique. part i: children attending the outpatient clinic
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2268704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18302770
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-36
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