Department of Public Health, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
National Institute of Malariology, Parasitology and Entomology, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Malar J. 2018 Mar 19;17(1):119. doi: 10.1186/s12936-018-2262-0.
In Vietnam, malaria persists in remote forested regions where infections are spatially heterogeneous, mostly asymptomatic and with low parasite density. Previous studies in Vietnam have investigated broad behavioural concepts such as 'engaging in forest activities' as risk factors for malaria infection, which may not explain heterogeneity in malaria risk, especially in malaria elimination settings.
A mixed methods study combining ethnographic research and a cross-sectional survey was embedded in a 1-year malariometric cohort study in three ethnic minority villages in South Tra My district, Quang Nam Province in Central Vietnam. Qualitative data collection included in-depth interviews, informal conversations and participant observations over a 2-month period, and the findings were used to develop the questionnaire used in the cross-sectional survey. The latter collected data on evening activities, mobility patterns and household characteristics. The primary outcome, recent exposure to malaria, was defined using the classification and regression tree method to determine significant changes in antibody titres during the year preceding the survey. Risk factor analyses for recent exposure to malaria were conducted using logistic regression.
22 in-depth interviews and numerous participant observations were recorded during the ethnographic research (April to June 2015), and 160 adults (86% response rate) responded to the cross-sectional survey (November to December 2015). Recent exposure to Plasmodium falciparum malaria was estimated at 22.9 and at 17.1% for Plasmodium vivax. Ongoing malaria transmission appears to be maintained by activities that delay or disrupt sleeping in a permanent structure in which a bed net could be hung, including evening drinking gatherings, fishing, logging in the forest and outdoor TV watching.
Vector control tools for outdoor evening activities in villages as well as at farms, forest and river locations should be incorporated into current malaria elimination efforts in Central Vietnam. Micro-epidemiology studies using mixed-methods designs can provide a comprehensive understanding of the malaria risk at fine spatial scales and better inform the implementation of targeted interventions for malaria elimination.
在越南,疟疾仍然存在于偏远的森林地区,这些地区的感染呈空间异质性,多数为无症状和低寄生虫密度。此前在越南的研究已经调查了广泛的行为概念,如“从事森林活动”作为疟疾感染的危险因素,但这些概念可能无法解释疟疾风险的异质性,尤其是在疟疾消除环境中。
本研究采用混合方法,将民族志研究与横断面调查相结合,嵌入越南广南省南土美区三个少数民族村庄为期一年的疟疾测量队列研究中。定性数据收集包括 2 个月的深入访谈、非正式对话和参与式观察,研究结果用于开发横断面调查中使用的问卷。后者收集了有关夜间活动、流动模式和家庭特征的数据。主要结局是最近疟疾接触,使用分类回归树方法确定调查前一年抗体滴度的显著变化来定义。使用逻辑回归分析疟疾最近接触的危险因素。
民族志研究期间(2015 年 4 月至 6 月)记录了 22 次深入访谈和多次参与式观察,横断面调查(2015 年 11 月至 12 月)共 160 名成年人(86%的回复率)作出回应。估计最近感染恶性疟原虫疟疾的比例为 22.9%,感染间日疟原虫的比例为 17.1%。持续的疟疾传播似乎是由在可以悬挂蚊帐的永久性结构中延迟或打断睡眠的活动维持的,包括夜间饮酒聚会、捕鱼、森林伐木和户外看电视。
应将针对村庄和农场、森林和河流地区夜间户外活动的病媒控制工具纳入越南中部当前的疟疾消除工作中。使用混合方法设计的微观流行病学研究可以更全面地了解精细空间尺度上的疟疾风险,并更好地为疟疾消除的靶向干预措施提供信息。