World Health Stat Q. 1992;45(2-3):257-66.
Malaria risk of varying degree exists in 99 countries or areas. However, falciparum malaria does not exist or its relative prevalence is less than 1% in 13 of these countries. Accurate information on the global incidence of malaria is difficult to obtain because reporting is particularly incomplete in areas known to be highly endemic. The global incidence of malaria is estimated to be nearly 120 million clinical cases each year, with nearly 300 million people carrying the parasite. 90% of the total number of cases reported annually to WHO are from 19 countries only. This does not include the WHO African Region where reporting of cases remains fragmentary and irregular despite improvements in recent years. Some 75% of cases are concentrated in 9 countries (in decreasing order): India, Brazil, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Indonesia, Viet Nam, Cambodia and China. Furthermore, within these countries malaria is concentrated in certain areas. Of a total world population of about 5.3 billion people, 3.1 billion (59%) live in areas free of malaria (it never existed, disappeared or was eliminated by antimalaria campaigns and the malaria-free status has been maintained). 1.7 billion people (32%) live in areas where endemic malaria was considerably reduced or even eliminated but transmission was reinstated and the situation is unstable or deteriorating. These latter areas include zones with the most severe malaria problems which developed following major ecological or social changes, such as agricultural or other economic exploitation of jungle areas, sociopolitical unrest, etc.; these zones comprise only about 1% of the world population. Areas where endemic malaria remains basically unchanged, and no national antimalaria programme was ever implemented, are inhabited by 500 million people (9%), mainly in tropical Africa. Severe malaria and mortality are caused by Plasmodium falciparum which is the predominant species of malaria in tropical Africa. In the rest of the world it is far less common. WHO receives very limited and irregular reports on malaria deaths. The vast majority of malaria deaths occur in Africa; estimates vary greatly: a figure of 800,000 deaths per year in African children has been quoted in 1991 by the WHO African Region. There are indications that mortality in children has fallen in some areas because of the widespread use of antimalarials, of social development and of better education. Countries in tropical Africa are estimated to have more than 80% of all clinical cases and more than 90% of all parasite carriers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
99个国家或地区存在不同程度的疟疾风险。然而,其中13个国家不存在恶性疟,或其相对流行率低于1%。由于在已知高流行地区的报告特别不完整,因此难以获得全球疟疾发病率的准确信息。据估计,全球每年疟疾临床病例近1.2亿例,近3亿人携带疟原虫。每年向世卫组织报告的病例总数中,90%仅来自19个国家。这还不包括世卫组织非洲区域,尽管近年来情况有所改善,但该区域的病例报告仍然零散且不规律。约75%的病例集中在9个国家(按降序排列):印度、巴西、阿富汗、斯里兰卡、泰国、印度尼西亚、越南、柬埔寨和中国。此外,在这些国家中,疟疾集中在某些地区。世界总人口约53亿,其中31亿(59%)生活在无疟疾地区(疟疾从未存在、已消失或通过抗疟运动被消灭且无疟疾状态得以维持)。17亿人(32%)生活在地方性疟疾大幅减少甚至消除但传播又重新出现且情况不稳定或正在恶化的地区。后一类地区包括随着重大生态或社会变化(如对丛林地区的农业或其他经济开发、社会政治动荡等)而出现最严重疟疾问题的区域;这些区域仅占世界人口的约1%。地方性疟疾基本保持不变且从未实施过国家抗疟计划的地区有5亿人居住(9%),主要在热带非洲。严重疟疾和死亡由恶性疟原虫引起,它是热带非洲疟疾的主要种类。在世界其他地区则不太常见。世卫组织收到的关于疟疾死亡的报告非常有限且不规律。绝大多数疟疾死亡发生在非洲;估计数字差异很大:1991年世卫组织非洲区域引用的非洲儿童每年死亡人数为80万。有迹象表明,由于抗疟药物的广泛使用、社会发展和教育水平提高,一些地区儿童死亡率有所下降。据估计,热带非洲国家的临床病例占所有病例的80%以上,疟原虫携带者占所有携带者的90%以上。(摘要截取自400字)