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Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia

BACKGROUND: The Government of Ethiopia and its partners have deployed artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACT) since 2004 and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) since 2005. Malaria interventions and trends in malaria cases and deaths were assessed at hospitals in malaria transmission areas...

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Autores principales: Aregawi, Maru, Lynch, Michael, Bekele, Worku, Kebede, Henok, Jima, Daddi, Taffese, Hiwot Solomon, Yenehun, Meseret Aseffa, Lilay, Abraham, Williams, Ryan, Thomson, Madeleine, Nafo-Traore, Fatoumata, Admasu, Kesetebirhan, Gebreyesus, Tedros Adhanom, Coosemans, Marc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4236017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25406083
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106359
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author Aregawi, Maru
Lynch, Michael
Bekele, Worku
Kebede, Henok
Jima, Daddi
Taffese, Hiwot Solomon
Yenehun, Meseret Aseffa
Lilay, Abraham
Williams, Ryan
Thomson, Madeleine
Nafo-Traore, Fatoumata
Admasu, Kesetebirhan
Gebreyesus, Tedros Adhanom
Coosemans, Marc
author_facet Aregawi, Maru
Lynch, Michael
Bekele, Worku
Kebede, Henok
Jima, Daddi
Taffese, Hiwot Solomon
Yenehun, Meseret Aseffa
Lilay, Abraham
Williams, Ryan
Thomson, Madeleine
Nafo-Traore, Fatoumata
Admasu, Kesetebirhan
Gebreyesus, Tedros Adhanom
Coosemans, Marc
author_sort Aregawi, Maru
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Government of Ethiopia and its partners have deployed artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACT) since 2004 and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) since 2005. Malaria interventions and trends in malaria cases and deaths were assessed at hospitals in malaria transmission areas during 2001–2011. METHODS: Regional LLINs distribution records were used to estimate the proportion of the population-at-risk protected by LLINs. Hospital records were reviewed to estimate ACT availability. Time-series analysis was applied to data from 41 hospitals in malaria risk areas to assess trends of malaria cases and deaths during pre-intervention (2001–2005) and post-interventions (2006–2011) periods. FINDINGS: The proportion of the population-at-risk potentially protected by LLINs increased to 51% in 2011. The proportion of facilities with ACTs in stock exceeded 87% during 2006–2011. Among all ages, confirmed malaria cases in 2011 declined by 66% (95% confidence interval [CI], 44–79%) and SPR by 37% (CI, 20%–51%) compared to the level predicted by pre-intervention trends. In children under 5 years of age, malaria admissions and deaths fell by 81% (CI, 47%–94%) and 73% (CI, 48%–86%) respectively. Optimal breakpoint of the trendlines occurred between January and June 2006, consistent with the timing of malaria interventions. Over the same period, non-malaria cases and deaths either increased or remained unchanged, the number of malaria diagnostic tests performed reflected the decline in malaria cases, and rainfall remained at levels supportive of malaria transmission. CONCLUSIONS: Malaria cases and deaths in Ethiopian hospitals decreased substantially during 2006–2011 in conjunction with scale-up of malaria interventions. The decrease could not be accounted for by changes in hospital visits, malaria diagnostic testing or rainfall. However, given the history of variable malaria transmission in Ethiopia, more data would be required to exclude the possibility that the decrease is due to other factors.
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spelling pubmed-42360172014-11-21 Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia Aregawi, Maru Lynch, Michael Bekele, Worku Kebede, Henok Jima, Daddi Taffese, Hiwot Solomon Yenehun, Meseret Aseffa Lilay, Abraham Williams, Ryan Thomson, Madeleine Nafo-Traore, Fatoumata Admasu, Kesetebirhan Gebreyesus, Tedros Adhanom Coosemans, Marc PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The Government of Ethiopia and its partners have deployed artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACT) since 2004 and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) since 2005. Malaria interventions and trends in malaria cases and deaths were assessed at hospitals in malaria transmission areas during 2001–2011. METHODS: Regional LLINs distribution records were used to estimate the proportion of the population-at-risk protected by LLINs. Hospital records were reviewed to estimate ACT availability. Time-series analysis was applied to data from 41 hospitals in malaria risk areas to assess trends of malaria cases and deaths during pre-intervention (2001–2005) and post-interventions (2006–2011) periods. FINDINGS: The proportion of the population-at-risk potentially protected by LLINs increased to 51% in 2011. The proportion of facilities with ACTs in stock exceeded 87% during 2006–2011. Among all ages, confirmed malaria cases in 2011 declined by 66% (95% confidence interval [CI], 44–79%) and SPR by 37% (CI, 20%–51%) compared to the level predicted by pre-intervention trends. In children under 5 years of age, malaria admissions and deaths fell by 81% (CI, 47%–94%) and 73% (CI, 48%–86%) respectively. Optimal breakpoint of the trendlines occurred between January and June 2006, consistent with the timing of malaria interventions. Over the same period, non-malaria cases and deaths either increased or remained unchanged, the number of malaria diagnostic tests performed reflected the decline in malaria cases, and rainfall remained at levels supportive of malaria transmission. CONCLUSIONS: Malaria cases and deaths in Ethiopian hospitals decreased substantially during 2006–2011 in conjunction with scale-up of malaria interventions. The decrease could not be accounted for by changes in hospital visits, malaria diagnostic testing or rainfall. However, given the history of variable malaria transmission in Ethiopia, more data would be required to exclude the possibility that the decrease is due to other factors. Public Library of Science 2014-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4236017/ /pubmed/25406083 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106359 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Aregawi, Maru
Lynch, Michael
Bekele, Worku
Kebede, Henok
Jima, Daddi
Taffese, Hiwot Solomon
Yenehun, Meseret Aseffa
Lilay, Abraham
Williams, Ryan
Thomson, Madeleine
Nafo-Traore, Fatoumata
Admasu, Kesetebirhan
Gebreyesus, Tedros Adhanom
Coosemans, Marc
Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title_full Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title_short Time Series Analysis of Trends in Malaria Cases and Deaths at Hospitals and the Effect of Antimalarial Interventions, 2001–2011, Ethiopia
title_sort time series analysis of trends in malaria cases and deaths at hospitals and the effect of antimalarial interventions, 2001–2011, ethiopia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4236017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25406083
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106359
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