Samadoulougou Sekou, Maheu-Giroux Mathieu, Kirakoya-Samadoulougou Fati, De Keukeleire Mathilde, Castro Marcia C, Robert Annie
Pôle Epidémiologie et Biostatistique (EPID), Institut de Recherche Expérimentale et Clinique (IREC), Faculté de Santé Publique (FSP), Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), Clos Chapelle-aux-champs 30, bte B1,30,13, 1200 Bruxelles, Belgium.
Parasit Vectors. 2014 Jul 29;7:350. doi: 10.1186/1756-3305-7-350.
Previous research on determinants of malaria in Burkina Faso has largely focused on individual risk factors. Malaria risk, however, is also shaped by community, health system, and climatic/environmental characteristics. The aims of this study were: i) to identify such individual, household, community, and climatic/environmental risk factors for malaria in children under five years of age, and ii) to produce a parasitaemia risk map of Burkina Faso.
The 2010 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) was the first in Burkina Faso that tested children for malaria parasitaemia. Multilevel and geo-statistical models were used to explore determinants of malaria using this nationally representative database.
Parasitaemia was collected from 6,102 children, of which 66.0% (95% confidence interval (CI): 64.0-68.0%) were positive for Plasmodium spp. Older children (>23 months) were more likely to be parasitaemic than younger ones, while children from wealthier households and whose mother had higher education were at a lower risk. At the community level, living in a district with a rate of attendance to health facilities lower than 2 visits per year was significantly associated with greater odds of being infected. Malaria prevalence was also associated with higher normalized difference vegetation index, lower average monthly rainfall, and lower population densities. Predicted malaria parasitaemia was spatially variable with locations falling within an 11%-92% prevalence range. The number of parasitaemic children was nonetheless concentrated in areas of high population density, albeit malaria risk was notably higher in the sparsely populated rural areas.
Malaria prevalence in Burkina Faso is considerably higher than in neighbouring countries. Our spatially-explicit population-based estimates of malaria risk and infected number of children could be used by local decision-makers to identify priority areas where control efforts should be enhanced.
此前关于布基纳法索疟疾决定因素的研究主要集中在个体风险因素上。然而,疟疾风险也受到社区、卫生系统以及气候/环境特征的影响。本研究的目的是:(i)确定五岁以下儿童患疟疾的个体、家庭、社区以及气候/环境风险因素;(ii)绘制布基纳法索的疟原虫血症风险地图。
2010年人口与健康调查(DHS)是布基纳法索首次对儿童进行疟疾寄生虫血症检测的调查。利用这个具有全国代表性的数据库,采用多层次和地理统计模型来探究疟疾的决定因素。
从6102名儿童中采集了寄生虫血症样本,其中66.0%(95%置信区间(CI):64.0 - 68.0%)的疟原虫属检测呈阳性。年龄较大的儿童(>23个月)比年龄较小的儿童更易出现疟原虫血症,而来自富裕家庭且母亲受教育程度较高的儿童风险较低。在社区层面,生活在每年前往卫生设施就诊率低于2次的地区,感染几率显著更高。疟疾患病率还与较高的归一化植被指数、较低的月平均降雨量以及较低的人口密度相关。预测的疟原虫血症在空间上存在差异,患病率范围在11% - 92%之间。尽管在人口稀少的农村地区疟疾风险明显更高,但疟原虫血症儿童数量仍集中在人口密度高的地区。
布基纳法索的疟疾患病率远高于邻国。我们基于空间明确的疟疾风险和感染儿童数量的人群估计值可供当地决策者用于确定应加强防控工作的优先区域。