Hay Simon I, Guerra Carlos A, Tatem Andrew J, Noor Abdisalan M, Snow Robert W
TALA Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2004 Jun;4(6):327-36. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(04)01043-6.
The aim of this review was to use geographic information systems in combination with historical maps to quantify the anthropogenic impact on the distribution of malaria in the 20th century. The nature of the cartographic record enabled global and regional patterns in the spatial limits of malaria to be investigated at six intervals between 1900 and 2002. Contemporaneous population surfaces also allowed changes in the numbers of people living in areas of malaria risk to be quantified. These data showed that during the past century, despite human activities reducing by half the land area supporting malaria, demographic changes resulted in a 2 billion increase in the total population exposed to malaria risk. Furthermore, stratifying the present day malaria extent by endemicity class and examining regional differences highlighted that nearly 1 billion people are exposed to hypoendemic and mesoendemic malaria in southeast Asia. We further concluded that some distortion in estimates of the regional distribution of malaria burden could have resulted from different methods used to calculate burden in Africa. Crude estimates of the national prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection based on endemicity maps corroborate these assertions. Finally, population projections for 2010 were used to investigate the potential effect of future demographic changes. These indicated that although population growth will not substantially change the regional distribution of people at malaria risk, around 400 million births will occur within the boundary of current distribution of malaria by 2010: the date by which the Roll Back Malaria initiative is challenged to halve the world's malaria burden.
本综述的目的是结合地理信息系统与历史地图,量化20世纪人类活动对疟疾分布的影响。制图记录的性质使我们能够在1900年至2002年期间的六个时间间隔,对疟疾空间范围的全球和区域模式进行研究。同时期的人口数据还可以量化生活在疟疾风险地区的人口数量变化。这些数据表明,在过去的一个世纪里,尽管人类活动使适合疟疾传播的土地面积减少了一半,但人口结构的变化导致面临疟疾风险的总人口增加了20亿。此外,按流行程度对当今疟疾分布范围进行分层,并考察区域差异,结果表明东南亚近10亿人面临低流行和中流行程度的疟疾风险。我们进一步得出结论,非洲疟疾负担区域分布估计中的一些偏差可能是由于计算负担的方法不同造成的。根据流行程度地图对恶性疟原虫感染的国家流行率进行的粗略估计证实了这些论断。最后,利用2010年的人口预测来研究未来人口结构变化可能产生的影响。结果表明,尽管人口增长不会大幅改变面临疟疾风险人群的区域分布,但到2010年,在目前疟疾分布范围内将有大约4亿新生儿出生:而“击退疟疾”倡议面临的挑战是到该日期将全球疟疾负担减半。