Musiime Alex K, Krezanoski Paul J, Smith David L, Kilama Maxwell, Conrad Melissa D, Otto Geoffrey, Kyagamba Patrick, Asiimwe Jackson, Rek John, Nankabirwa Joaniter I, Arinaitwe Emmanuel, Akol Anne M, Kamya Moses R, Staedke Sarah G, Drakeley Chris, Bousema Teun, Lindsay Steve W, Dorsey Grant, Tusting Lucy S
Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Zoology, Entomology and Fisheries Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2022 Mar 3;2(3):e0000063. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000063. eCollection 2022.
House construction is rapidly modernizing across Africa but the potential benefits for human health are poorly understood. We hypothesised that improvements to housing would be associated with reductions in malaria, acute respiratory infection (ARI) and gastrointestinal illness in an area of low malaria endemicity in Uganda. Data were analysed from a cohort study of male and female child and adult residents (n = 531) of 80 randomly-selected households in Nagongera sub-county, followed for 24 months (October 4, 2017 to October 31, 2019). Houses were classified as modern (brick walls, metal roof and closed eaves) or traditional (all other homes). Light trap collections of mosquitoes were done every two weeks in all sleeping rooms. Every four weeks, we measured malaria infection (using microscopy and qPCR to detect malaria parasites), incidence of malaria, ARI and gastrointestinal illness. We collected 15,780 adult female Anopheles over 7,631 nights. We collected 13,277 blood samples of which 10.2% (1,347) were positive for malaria parasites. Over 958 person years we diagnosed 38 episodes of uncomplicated malaria (incidence 0.04 episodes per person-year at risk), 2,553 episodes of ARI (incidence 2.7 episodes per person-year) and 387 episodes of gastrointestinal illness (incidence 0.4 episodes per person-year). Modern houses were associated with a 53% lower human biting rate compared to traditional houses (adjusted incidence rate ratio [aIRR] 0.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.32-0.67, p<0.001) and a 24% lower incidence of gastrointestinal illness (aIRR 0.76, 95% CI 0.59-0.98, p = 0.04) but no changes in malaria prevalence, malaria incidence nor ARI incidence. House improvements may reduce mosquito-biting rates and gastrointestinal illness among children and adults. For the health sector to leverage Africa's housing modernization, research is urgently needed to identify the healthiest house designs and to assess their effectiveness across a range of epidemiological settings in sub-Saharan Africa.
非洲各地的房屋建设正在迅速实现现代化,但人们对其对人类健康的潜在益处却知之甚少。我们假设,在乌干达疟疾低流行地区,住房条件的改善将与疟疾、急性呼吸道感染(ARI)和胃肠道疾病的减少相关。对纳贡埃拉子县80个随机选择家庭的男童、女童及成年居民(n = 531)进行了一项队列研究,并对数据进行了分析,随访期为24个月(2017年10月4日至2019年10月31日)。房屋被分为现代房屋(砖墙、金属屋顶和封闭屋檐)或传统房屋(所有其他房屋)。每两周在所有卧室用诱蚊灯收集蚊子。每四周,我们测量疟疾感染情况(使用显微镜检查和定量聚合酶链反应检测疟原虫)、疟疾发病率、ARI和胃肠道疾病发病率。在7631个夜晚共收集了15780只成年雌性按蚊。我们采集了13277份血样,其中10.2%(1347份)疟原虫呈阳性。在958人年中,我们诊断出38例非复杂性疟疾发作(发病率为每危险人年0.04例)、2553例ARI发作(发病率为每人年2.7例)和387例胃肠道疾病发作(发病率为每人年0.4例)。与传统房屋相比,现代房屋的人均叮咬率低53%(调整发病率比[aIRR] 0.47,95%置信区间[CI] 0.32 - 0.67,p<0.001),胃肠道疾病发病率低24%(aIRR 0.76,95% CI 0.59 - 0.98,p = 0.04),但疟疾患病率、疟疾发病率和ARI发病率均无变化。房屋改善可能会降低儿童和成人的蚊虫叮咬率以及胃肠道疾病发病率。为了卫生部门利用非洲的住房现代化成果,迫切需要开展研究,以确定最健康的房屋设计,并评估其在撒哈拉以南非洲一系列流行病学环境中的有效性。