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Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi

BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization has recommended that anaemia be used as an additional indicator to monitor malaria burden at the community level as malaria interventions are nationally scaled up. To date, there are no published evaluations of this recommendation. METHODS: To evaluate this...

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Autores principales: Mathanga, Don P, Campbell, Carl H, Eng, Jodi Vanden, Wolkon, Adam, Bronzan, Rachel N, Malenga, Grace J, Ali, Doreen, Desai, Meghna
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2864286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20409342
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-107
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author Mathanga, Don P
Campbell, Carl H
Eng, Jodi Vanden
Wolkon, Adam
Bronzan, Rachel N
Malenga, Grace J
Ali, Doreen
Desai, Meghna
author_facet Mathanga, Don P
Campbell, Carl H
Eng, Jodi Vanden
Wolkon, Adam
Bronzan, Rachel N
Malenga, Grace J
Ali, Doreen
Desai, Meghna
author_sort Mathanga, Don P
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization has recommended that anaemia be used as an additional indicator to monitor malaria burden at the community level as malaria interventions are nationally scaled up. To date, there are no published evaluations of this recommendation. METHODS: To evaluate this recommendation, a comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia among 6-30 month old children was made during two repeated cross-sectional household (HH) and health facility (HF) surveys in six districts across Malawi at baseline (2005) and in a follow-up survey (2008) after a scale up of malaria control interventions. RESULTS: HH net ownership did not increase between the years (50.5% vs. 49.8%), but insecticide treated net (ITN) ownership increased modestly from 41.5% (95% CI: 37.2%-45.8%) in 2005 to 45.3% (95% CI: 42.6%-48.0%) in 2008. ITN use by children 6-30 months old, who were living in HH with at least one net, increased from 73.6% (95% CI:68.2%-79.1%) to 80.0% (95% CI:75.9%-84.1%) over the three-year period. This modest increase in ITN use was associated with a decrease in moderate to severe anaemia (Hb <8 g/dl) from 18.4% (95% CI:14.9%-21.8%) in 2005 to 15.4% (13.2%-17.7%) in 2008, while parasitaemia, measured as positive-slide microscopy, decreased from 18.9% (95% CI:14.7%-23.2%) to 16.9% (95% CI:13.8%-20.0%), a relative reduction of 16% and 11%, respectively. In HF surveys, anaemia prevalence decreased from 18.3% (95% CI: 14.9%-21.7%) to 15.4% (95% CI: 12.7%-18.2%), while parasitaemia decreased from 30.6% (95% CI: 25.7%-35.5%) to 13.2% (95% CI: 10.6%-15.8%), a relative reduction of 15% and 57%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Increasing access to effective malaria prevention was associated with a reduced burden of malaria in young Malawian children. Anaemia measured at the HF level at time of routine vaccination may be a good surrogate indicator for its measurement at the HH level in evaluating national malaria control programmes.
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spelling pubmed-28642862010-05-05 Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi Mathanga, Don P Campbell, Carl H Eng, Jodi Vanden Wolkon, Adam Bronzan, Rachel N Malenga, Grace J Ali, Doreen Desai, Meghna Malar J Research BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization has recommended that anaemia be used as an additional indicator to monitor malaria burden at the community level as malaria interventions are nationally scaled up. To date, there are no published evaluations of this recommendation. METHODS: To evaluate this recommendation, a comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia among 6-30 month old children was made during two repeated cross-sectional household (HH) and health facility (HF) surveys in six districts across Malawi at baseline (2005) and in a follow-up survey (2008) after a scale up of malaria control interventions. RESULTS: HH net ownership did not increase between the years (50.5% vs. 49.8%), but insecticide treated net (ITN) ownership increased modestly from 41.5% (95% CI: 37.2%-45.8%) in 2005 to 45.3% (95% CI: 42.6%-48.0%) in 2008. ITN use by children 6-30 months old, who were living in HH with at least one net, increased from 73.6% (95% CI:68.2%-79.1%) to 80.0% (95% CI:75.9%-84.1%) over the three-year period. This modest increase in ITN use was associated with a decrease in moderate to severe anaemia (Hb <8 g/dl) from 18.4% (95% CI:14.9%-21.8%) in 2005 to 15.4% (13.2%-17.7%) in 2008, while parasitaemia, measured as positive-slide microscopy, decreased from 18.9% (95% CI:14.7%-23.2%) to 16.9% (95% CI:13.8%-20.0%), a relative reduction of 16% and 11%, respectively. In HF surveys, anaemia prevalence decreased from 18.3% (95% CI: 14.9%-21.7%) to 15.4% (95% CI: 12.7%-18.2%), while parasitaemia decreased from 30.6% (95% CI: 25.7%-35.5%) to 13.2% (95% CI: 10.6%-15.8%), a relative reduction of 15% and 57%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Increasing access to effective malaria prevention was associated with a reduced burden of malaria in young Malawian children. Anaemia measured at the HF level at time of routine vaccination may be a good surrogate indicator for its measurement at the HH level in evaluating national malaria control programmes. BioMed Central 2010-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC2864286/ /pubmed/20409342 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-107 Text en Copyright ©2010 Mathanga 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
Mathanga, Don P
Campbell, Carl H
Eng, Jodi Vanden
Wolkon, Adam
Bronzan, Rachel N
Malenga, Grace J
Ali, Doreen
Desai, Meghna
Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title_full Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title_fullStr Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title_short Comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and EPI-health facility surveys in Malawi
title_sort comparison of anaemia and parasitaemia as indicators of malaria control in household and epi-health facility surveys in malawi
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2864286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20409342
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-107
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