Saugeon C, Baldet T, Akogbeto M, Henry M C
Service de coopération française, Ambassade de France.
Med Trop (Mars). 2009 Apr;69(2):203-7.
The purpose of this review of the literature is to present factors possibly affecting the spread of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa over the next 20 years. Malaria is a vector-borne disease that depends on environmental and human constraints. The main environmental limitations involve susceptibility of the vector (mosquitoes of the Anopheles genus) and parasite (Plasmodium falciparum) to climate. Malaria is a stable, endemic disease over most of the African continent. Climatic change can only affect a few regions on the fringes of stable zones (e.g. altitude areas or Sahel) where malaria is an unstable, epidemic disease. Higher temperatures could induce a decrease of malaria transmission in regions of the Sahel or an increase in the highlands. The extent of these overall trends will depend on the unpredictable occurrence of major meteorological phenomenon as well as on human activities affecting the environment that could lead to dramatic but limited outbreaks in some locations. The most influential human factors could be runaway demographic growth and urban development. Estimations based on modeling studies indicate that urbanization will lead to a 53.5% drop in exposure to malaria by 2030. However this reduction could be less than expected because of adaptation of Anopheles gambiae and An. arabiensis, the main vectors of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa, to the urban environment as well as increasing vector resistance to insecticides. Another unforeseeable factor that could induce unexpected malaria epidemics is mass migration due to war or famine. Finally immunosuppressive illnesses (e.g. HIV and malnutrition) could alter individual susceptibility to malaria. Social constraints also include human activities that modify land use. In this regard land use (e.g. forest clearance and irrigation) is known to influence the burden of malaria that is itself dependent on local determinants of transmission. Overall the most important social constraint for the population will be access to malarial prevention and implementation action to control this scourge.
本综述文献的目的是呈现可能在未来20年影响撒哈拉以南非洲疟疾传播的因素。疟疾是一种媒介传播疾病,取决于环境和人类因素的限制。主要的环境限制因素包括媒介(按蚊属蚊子)和寄生虫(恶性疟原虫)对气候的易感性。在非洲大陆的大部分地区,疟疾是一种稳定的地方病。气候变化只会影响稳定区域边缘的少数地区(如高海拔地区或萨赫勒地区),在这些地区疟疾是一种不稳定的流行病。气温升高可能导致萨赫勒地区疟疾传播减少,或高地地区疟疾传播增加。这些总体趋势的程度将取决于重大气象现象的不可预测发生情况,以及影响环境的人类活动,这些活动可能导致某些地方出现剧烈但有限的疫情爆发。最具影响力的人类因素可能是失控的人口增长和城市发展。基于模型研究的估计表明,到2030年城市化将导致疟疾暴露率下降53.5%。然而,由于撒哈拉以南非洲疟疾的主要传播媒介冈比亚按蚊和阿拉伯按蚊适应城市环境以及媒介对杀虫剂的抗性增加,这种减少可能低于预期。另一个可能引发意外疟疾疫情的不可预见因素是战争或饥荒导致的大规模移民。最后,免疫抑制性疾病(如艾滋病毒和营养不良)可能改变个体对疟疾的易感性。社会因素还包括改变土地利用的人类活动。在这方面,土地利用(如森林砍伐和灌溉)已知会影响疟疾负担,而疟疾负担本身又取决于当地的传播决定因素。总体而言,对人群最重要的社会限制因素将是获得疟疾预防措施和实施控制这一祸害的行动。