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Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area

BACKGROUND: Identifying and targeting hyper-endemic communities within meso-endemic areas constitutes an important challenge in malaria control in endemic countries such like Angola. Recent national and global predictive maps of malaria allow the identification and quantification of the population a...

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Autores principales: Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares, Langa, Antonio, Sousa-Figueiredo, José Carlos, Clements, Archie CA, Nery, Susana Vaz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3519509/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23173636
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-385
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author Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares
Langa, Antonio
Sousa-Figueiredo, José Carlos
Clements, Archie CA
Nery, Susana Vaz
author_facet Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares
Langa, Antonio
Sousa-Figueiredo, José Carlos
Clements, Archie CA
Nery, Susana Vaz
author_sort Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Identifying and targeting hyper-endemic communities within meso-endemic areas constitutes an important challenge in malaria control in endemic countries such like Angola. Recent national and global predictive maps of malaria allow the identification and quantification of the population at risk of malaria infection in Angola, but their small-scale accuracy is surrounded by large uncertainties. To observe the need to develop higher resolution malaria endemicity maps a predictive risk map of malaria infection for the municipality of Dande (a malaria endemic area in Northern Angola) was developed and compared to existing national and global maps, the role of individual, household and environmental risk factors for malaria endemicity was quantified and the spatial variation in the number of children at-risk of malaria was estimated. METHODS: Bayesian geostatistical models were developed to predict small-scale spatial variation using data collected during a parasitological survey conducted from May to August 2010. Maps of the posterior distributions of predicted prevalence were constructed in a geographical information system. RESULTS: Malaria infection was significantly associated with maternal malaria awareness, households with canvas roofing, distance to health care centre and distance to rivers. The predictive map showed remarkable spatial heterogeneity in malaria risk across the Dande municipality in contrast to previous national and global spatial risk models; large high-risk areas of malaria infection (prevalence >50%) were found in the northern and most eastern areas of the municipality, in line with the observed prevalence. CONCLUSIONS: There is remarkable spatial heterogeneity of malaria burden which previous national and global spatial modelling studies failed to identify suggesting that the identification of malaria hot-spots within seemingly mesoendemic areas may require the generation of high resolution malaria maps. Individual, household and hydrological factors play an important role in the small-scale geographical variation of malaria risk in northern Angola. The results presented in this study can be used by provincial malaria control programme managers to help target the delivery of malaria control resources to priority areas in the Dande municipality.
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spelling pubmed-35195092012-12-12 Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares Langa, Antonio Sousa-Figueiredo, José Carlos Clements, Archie CA Nery, Susana Vaz Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Identifying and targeting hyper-endemic communities within meso-endemic areas constitutes an important challenge in malaria control in endemic countries such like Angola. Recent national and global predictive maps of malaria allow the identification and quantification of the population at risk of malaria infection in Angola, but their small-scale accuracy is surrounded by large uncertainties. To observe the need to develop higher resolution malaria endemicity maps a predictive risk map of malaria infection for the municipality of Dande (a malaria endemic area in Northern Angola) was developed and compared to existing national and global maps, the role of individual, household and environmental risk factors for malaria endemicity was quantified and the spatial variation in the number of children at-risk of malaria was estimated. METHODS: Bayesian geostatistical models were developed to predict small-scale spatial variation using data collected during a parasitological survey conducted from May to August 2010. Maps of the posterior distributions of predicted prevalence were constructed in a geographical information system. RESULTS: Malaria infection was significantly associated with maternal malaria awareness, households with canvas roofing, distance to health care centre and distance to rivers. The predictive map showed remarkable spatial heterogeneity in malaria risk across the Dande municipality in contrast to previous national and global spatial risk models; large high-risk areas of malaria infection (prevalence >50%) were found in the northern and most eastern areas of the municipality, in line with the observed prevalence. CONCLUSIONS: There is remarkable spatial heterogeneity of malaria burden which previous national and global spatial modelling studies failed to identify suggesting that the identification of malaria hot-spots within seemingly mesoendemic areas may require the generation of high resolution malaria maps. Individual, household and hydrological factors play an important role in the small-scale geographical variation of malaria risk in northern Angola. The results presented in this study can be used by provincial malaria control programme managers to help target the delivery of malaria control resources to priority areas in the Dande municipality. BioMed Central 2012-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3519509/ /pubmed/23173636 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-385 Text en Copyright ©2012 Magalhães 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
Magalhães, Ricardo J Soares
Langa, Antonio
Sousa-Figueiredo, José Carlos
Clements, Archie CA
Nery, Susana Vaz
Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title_full Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title_fullStr Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title_full_unstemmed Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title_short Finding malaria hot-spots in northern Angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
title_sort finding malaria hot-spots in northern angola: the role of individual, household and environmental factors within a meso-endemic area
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3519509/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23173636
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-385
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