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Plasmodium falciparum; parasite prevalence in East Africa: updating data for malaria stratification

Authors :
Victor A. Alegana
Peter M. Macharia
Samuel Muchiri
Eda Mumo
Elvis Oyugi
Alice Kamau
Frank Chacky
Sumaiyya Thawer
Fabrizio Molteni
Damian Rutazanna
Catherine Maiteki-Sebuguzi
Samuel Gonahasa
Abdisalan M. Noor
Robert W. Snow
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
University of Basel, 2021.

Abstract

The High Burden High Impact (HBHI) strategy for malaria encourages countries to use multiple sources of available data to define the sub-national vulnerabilities to malaria risk, including parasite prevalence. Here, a modelled estimate of Plasmodium falciparum from an updated assembly of community parasite survey data in Kenya, mainland Tanzania, and Uganda is presented and used to provide a more contemporary understanding of the sub-national malaria prevalence stratification across the sub-region for 2019. Malaria prevalence data from surveys undertaken between January 2010 and June 2020 were assembled form each of the three countries. Bayesian spatiotemporal model-based approaches were used to interpolate space-time data at fine spatial resolution adjusting for population, environmental and ecological covariates across the three countries. A total of 18,940 time-space age-standardised and microscopy-converted surveys were assembled of which 14,170 (74.8%) were identified after 2017. The estimated national population-adjusted posterior mean parasite prevalence was 4.7% (95% Bayesian Credible Interval 2.6–36.9) in Kenya, 10.6% (3.4–39.2) in mainland Tanzania, and 9.5% (4.0–48.3) in Uganda. In 2019, more than 12.7 million people resided in communities where parasite prevalence was predicted ≥ 30%, including 6.4%, 12.1% and 6.3% of Kenya, mainland Tanzania and Uganda populations, respectively. Conversely, areas that supported very low parasite prevalence (

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....59506a2507fde87cd2420132b2c0f586
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5451/unibas-ep88919