The independent effect of living in malaria hotspots on future malaria infection: an observational study from Misungwi, Tanzania.

Jacklin F Mosha; Hugh JW Sturrock; Joelle M Brown; Ramadhani Hashim; Gibson Kibiki; Daniel Chandramohan ORCID logo; Roland D Gosling ORCID logo; (2014) The independent effect of living in malaria hotspots on future malaria infection: an observational study from Misungwi, Tanzania. Malaria journal, 13 (1). 445-. ISSN 1475-2875 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-445
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BACKGROUND: As malaria transmission declines, continued improvements of prevention and control interventions will increasingly rely on accurate knowledge of risk factors and an ability to define high-risk areas and populations at risk for focal targeting of interventions. This paper explores the independent association between living in a hotspot and prospective risk of malaria infection. METHODS: Malaria infection status defined by nPCR and AMA-1 status in year 1 were used to define geographic hotspots using two geospatial statistical methods (SaTScan and Kernel density smoothing). Other malaria risk factors for malaria infection were explored by fitting a multivariable model. RESULTS: This study demonstrated that residing in infection hotspot of malaria transmission is an independent predictor of malaria infection in the future. CONCLUSION: It is likely that targeting such hotspots with better coverage and improved malaria control strategies will result in more cost-efficient uses of resources to move towards malaria elimination.


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