Wielgosz Benjamin, Kato Edward, Ringler Claudia
World Economic Forum, 91-93 route de la Capite, 1223 Cologny, Geneva, Switzerland.
Malar J. 2014 Jul 3;13:251. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-251.
This paper establishes empirical evidence relating the agriculture and health sectors in Uganda. The analysis explores linkages between agricultural management, malaria and implications for improving community health outcomes in rural Uganda. The goal of this exploratory work is to expand the evidence-base for collaboration between the agricultural and health sectors in Uganda.
The paper presents an analysis of data from the 2006 Uganda National Household Survey using a parametric multivariate Two-Limit Tobit model to identify correlations between agro-ecological variables including geographically joined daily seasonal precipitation records and household level malaria risk. The analysis of agricultural and environmental factors as they affect household malaria rates, disaggregated by age-group, is inspired by a complimentary review of existing agricultural malaria literature indicating a gap in evidence with respect to agricultural management as a form of malaria vector management. Crop choices and agricultural management practices may contribute to vector control through the simultaneous effects of reducing malaria transmission, improving housing and nutrition through income gains, and reducing insecticide resistance in both malaria vectors and agricultural pests.
The econometric results show the existence of statistically significant correlations between crops, such as sweet potatoes/yams, beans, millet and sorghum, with household malaria risk. Local environmental factors are also influential- daily maximum temperature is negatively correlated with malaria, while daily minimum temperature is positively correlated with malaria, confirming trends in the broader literature are applicable to the Ugandan context.
Although not necessarily causative, the findings provide sufficient evidence to warrant purposefully designed work to test for agriculture health causation in vector management. A key constraint to modeling the agricultural basis of malaria transmission is the lack of data integrating both the health and agricultural information necessary to satisfy the differing methodologies used by the two sectors. A national platform for collaboration between the agricultural and health sectors could help align programs to achieve better measurements of agricultural interactions with vector reproduction and evaluate the potential for agricultural policy and programs to support rural malaria control.
本文建立了乌干达农业与卫生部门之间关系的实证证据。该分析探讨了农业管理、疟疾之间的联系以及对改善乌干达农村社区健康结果的影响。这项探索性工作的目标是扩大乌干达农业和卫生部门之间合作的证据基础。
本文对2006年乌干达全国住户调查的数据进行了分析,使用参数多元双限托比特模型来确定农业生态变量(包括地理上相连的每日季节性降水记录)与家庭层面疟疾风险之间的相关性。对影响家庭疟疾发病率的农业和环境因素按年龄组进行分类分析,其灵感来自于对现有农业疟疾文献的补充综述,该综述表明在作为疟疾媒介管理形式的农业管理方面存在证据空白。作物选择和农业管理实践可能通过减少疟疾传播、通过收入增加改善住房和营养以及降低疟疾媒介和农业害虫的抗药性等同时作用来有助于病媒控制。
计量经济学结果表明,诸如红薯/山药、豆类、小米和高粱等作物与家庭疟疾风险之间存在统计学上的显著相关性。当地环境因素也有影响——每日最高温度与疟疾呈负相关,而每日最低温度与疟疾呈正相关,这证实了更广泛文献中的趋势适用于乌干达的情况。
尽管不一定具有因果关系,但这些发现提供了充分的证据,有必要开展有针对性设计的工作,以检验病媒管理中农业与健康之间的因果关系。对疟疾传播的农业基础进行建模的一个关键限制是缺乏整合两个部门使用的不同方法所需的健康和农业信息的数据。农业和卫生部门之间的国家合作平台可以帮助调整项目,以更好地衡量农业与病媒繁殖之间的相互作用,并评估农业政策和项目支持农村疟疾控制的潜力。