School of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Sciences, Pietermaritzburg Campus, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X01, Scottsville 3209, South Africa.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Oct 30;17(21):7975. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17217975.
Malaria is a major public health risk in Rwanda where children and pregnant women are most vulnerable. This infectious disease remains the main cause of morbidity and mortality among children in Rwanda. The main objectives of this study were to assess the prevalence of malaria among children aged six months to 14 years old in Rwanda and to identify the factors associated with malaria in this age group. This study used data from the 2017 Rwanda Malaria Indicator Survey. Due to the complex design used in sampling, a survey logistic regression model was used to fit the data and the outcome variable was the presence or absence of malaria. This study considered 8209 children in the analysis and the prevalence of malaria was 14.0%. This rate was higher among children aged 5-9 years old (15.6%), compared to other age groups. Evidently, the prevalence of malaria was also higher among children from poor families (19.4%) compared to children from the richest families (4.3%). The prevalence of malaria was higher among children from rural households (16.2%) compared to children from urban households (3.4%). The results revealed that other significant factors associated with malaria were: the gender of the child, the number of household members, whether the household had mosquito bed nets for sleeping, whether the dwelling had undergone indoor residual spraying in the 12 months prior to the survey, the location of the household's source of drinking water, the main wall materials of the dwelling, and the age of the head of the household. The prevalence of malaria was also high among children living in houses with walls built from poorly suited materials; this suggests the need for intervention in construction materials. Further, it was found that the Eastern Province also needs special consideration in malaria control due to the higher prevalence of the disease among its residents, compared to those in other provinces.
疟疾是卢旺达的一个主要公共卫生风险,儿童和孕妇最为脆弱。这种传染病仍然是卢旺达儿童发病率和死亡率的主要原因。本研究的主要目的是评估卢旺达 6 个月至 14 岁儿童疟疾的流行情况,并确定该年龄段疟疾的相关因素。本研究使用了 2017 年卢旺达疟疾指标调查的数据。由于在抽样中使用了复杂的设计,因此使用了调查逻辑回归模型来拟合数据,结果变量是疟疾的存在与否。本研究在分析中考虑了 8209 名儿童,疟疾的流行率为 14.0%。与其他年龄组相比,5-9 岁儿童的疟疾流行率(15.6%)更高。显然,贫困家庭的儿童(19.4%)比最富裕家庭的儿童(4.3%)疟疾流行率更高。农村家庭的儿童(16.2%)比城市家庭的儿童(3.4%)疟疾流行率更高。结果表明,与疟疾相关的其他重要因素包括:儿童的性别、家庭人口数量、家庭是否有用于睡眠的蚊帐、家庭在调查前 12 个月内是否进行过室内滞留喷洒、家庭饮用水源的位置、住房的主要墙壁材料以及家庭户主的年龄。住在墙壁由不适宜材料建造的房屋中的儿童的疟疾流行率也很高,这表明需要对建筑材料进行干预。此外,由于其居民的疟疾发病率高于其他省份,因此发现东部省在疟疾控制方面也需要特别考虑。