1. Non-adherence to long-lasting insecticide treated bednet use following successful malaria control in Tororo, Uganda
- Author
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Moses R. Kamya, Chris Drakeley, Geoffrey Otto, Joaniter I. Nankabirwa, Alex K. Musiime, Emmanuel Arinaitwe, Jackson Asiimwe Rwatooro, Maato Zedi, John Rek, Sarah G. Staedke, Paul J. Krezanoski, Grant Dorsey, Philip J. Rosenthal, Patrick Kyagamba, and Carvalho, Luzia Helena
- Subjects
Questionnaires ,Male ,Mosquito Control ,Epidemiology ,Physiology ,Indoor residual spraying ,Disease Vectors ,Logistic regression ,Mosquitoes ,Cohort Studies ,Geographical Locations ,Families ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medical Conditions ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Uganda ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Children ,Family Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,Behavior change ,Eukaryota ,Body Fluids ,Insects ,Infectious Diseases ,Blood ,Research Design ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,Anatomy ,Infection ,Cohort study ,Research Article ,Adult ,Arthropoda ,Adolescent ,General Science & Technology ,Science ,030231 tropical medicine ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,parasitic diseases ,Parasitic Diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Insecticide-Treated Bednets ,Preschool ,Survey Research ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Invertebrates ,Non adherence ,Malaria ,Insect Vectors ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Species Interactions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Age Groups ,Medical Risk Factors ,Insecticide-Treated Bednet ,People and Places ,Africa ,Population Groupings ,business ,Zoology ,Entomology ,Demography - Abstract
Indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticide-treated bednets (LLINs) are common tools for reducing malaria transmission. We studied a cohort in Uganda with universal access to LLINs after 5 years of sustained IRS to explore LLIN adherence when malaria transmission has been greatly reduced. Eighty households and 526 individuals in Nagongera, Uganda were followed from October 2017 –October 2019. Every two weeks, mosquitoes were collected from sleeping rooms and LLIN adherence the prior night assessed. Episodes of malaria were diagnosed using passive surveillance. Risk factors for LLIN non-adherence were evaluated using multi-level mixed logistic regression. An age-matched case-control design was used to measure the association between LLIN non-adherence and malaria. Across all time periods, and particularly in the last 6 months, non-adherence was higher among both children
- Published
- 2020