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Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time

BACKGROUND: Presently, many malaria control programmes use health facility data to evaluate the impact of their interventions. Facility-based malaria data, although useful, have problems with completeness, validity and representativeness and reliance on routinely collected health facility data might...

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Autores principales: Oduro, Abraham R., Bojang, Kalifa A., Conway, David J., Corrah, Tumani, Greenwood, Brian M., Schellenberg, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3208541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22073155
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026305
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author Oduro, Abraham R.
Bojang, Kalifa A.
Conway, David J.
Corrah, Tumani
Greenwood, Brian M.
Schellenberg, David
author_facet Oduro, Abraham R.
Bojang, Kalifa A.
Conway, David J.
Corrah, Tumani
Greenwood, Brian M.
Schellenberg, David
author_sort Oduro, Abraham R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Presently, many malaria control programmes use health facility data to evaluate the impact of their interventions. Facility-based malaria data, although useful, have problems with completeness, validity and representativeness and reliance on routinely collected health facility data might undermine demonstration of the magnitude of the impact of the recent scaleups of malaria interventions. To determine whether carefully conducted health centre surveys can be reliable means of monitoring area specific malaria epidemiology, we have compared malaria specific indices obtained from surveys in health centres with indices obtained from cross-sectional surveys conducted in their catchment communities. METHODS: A series of age stratified, seasonal, cross-sectional surveys were conducted during the peak malaria transmission season in 2008 and during the following dry season in 2009 in six ecologically diverse areas in The Gambia. Participants were patients who attended the health centres plus a representative sample from the catchment villages of these health facilities. Parasitaemia, anaemia, attributable proportion of fever and anti-MSP1-(19) antibody seroprevalence were compared in the health facility attendees and community participants. RESULTS: A total of 16,230 subjects completed the study; approximately half participated in the health centre surveys and half in the wet season surveys. Data from both the health centre and community surveys showed that malaria endemicity in The Gambia is now low, heterogeneous and seasonal. In the wet season, parasitaemia, seroprevalence and fever prevalence were higher in subjects seen in the health centres than in the community surveys. Age patterns of parasitaemia, attributable proportions of fever and seroprevalence rates were similar in subjects who participated in the community and health centre surveys. CONCLUSION: Health centre surveys have potential as a surveillance tool for evaluating area specific malaria control activities and for monitoring changes in local malaria epidemiology over time.
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spelling pubmed-32085412011-11-09 Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time Oduro, Abraham R. Bojang, Kalifa A. Conway, David J. Corrah, Tumani Greenwood, Brian M. Schellenberg, David PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Presently, many malaria control programmes use health facility data to evaluate the impact of their interventions. Facility-based malaria data, although useful, have problems with completeness, validity and representativeness and reliance on routinely collected health facility data might undermine demonstration of the magnitude of the impact of the recent scaleups of malaria interventions. To determine whether carefully conducted health centre surveys can be reliable means of monitoring area specific malaria epidemiology, we have compared malaria specific indices obtained from surveys in health centres with indices obtained from cross-sectional surveys conducted in their catchment communities. METHODS: A series of age stratified, seasonal, cross-sectional surveys were conducted during the peak malaria transmission season in 2008 and during the following dry season in 2009 in six ecologically diverse areas in The Gambia. Participants were patients who attended the health centres plus a representative sample from the catchment villages of these health facilities. Parasitaemia, anaemia, attributable proportion of fever and anti-MSP1-(19) antibody seroprevalence were compared in the health facility attendees and community participants. RESULTS: A total of 16,230 subjects completed the study; approximately half participated in the health centre surveys and half in the wet season surveys. Data from both the health centre and community surveys showed that malaria endemicity in The Gambia is now low, heterogeneous and seasonal. In the wet season, parasitaemia, seroprevalence and fever prevalence were higher in subjects seen in the health centres than in the community surveys. Age patterns of parasitaemia, attributable proportions of fever and seroprevalence rates were similar in subjects who participated in the community and health centre surveys. CONCLUSION: Health centre surveys have potential as a surveillance tool for evaluating area specific malaria control activities and for monitoring changes in local malaria epidemiology over time. Public Library of Science 2011-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3208541/ /pubmed/22073155 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026305 Text en Oduro et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oduro, Abraham R.
Bojang, Kalifa A.
Conway, David J.
Corrah, Tumani
Greenwood, Brian M.
Schellenberg, David
Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title_full Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title_fullStr Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title_full_unstemmed Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title_short Health Centre Surveys as a Potential Tool for Monitoring Malaria Epidemiology by Area and over Time
title_sort health centre surveys as a potential tool for monitoring malaria epidemiology by area and over time
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3208541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22073155
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026305
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