Litcius/Paper detail

Recent Travel History and Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Infection in a Region of Heterogenous Transmission in Southern Province, Zambia

Travis R. Porter, Timothy P. Finn, Kafula Silumbe, Victor Chalwe, Busiku Hamainza, Emmanuel Hakwia Kooma, Hawela Moonga, Adam Bennett, Joshua Yukich, Richard W. Steketee, Joseph Keating, John M. Miller, Thomas P. Eisele

2020American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As Zambia continues to reduce its malaria incidence and target elimination in Southern Province, there is a need to identify factors that can reintroduce parasites and sustain malaria transmission. To examine the relative contributions of types of human mobility on malaria prevalence, this analysis quantifies the proportion of the population having recently traveled during both peak and nonpeak transmission seasons over the course of 2 years and assesses the relationship between short-term travel and malaria infection status. Among all residents targeted by mass drug administration in the Lake Kariba region of Southern Province, 602,620 rapid diagnostic tests and recent travel histories were collected during four campaign rounds occurring between December 2014 and February 2016. Rates of short-term travel in the previous 2 weeks fluctuated seasonally from 0.3% to 1.2%. Travel was significantly associated with prevalent malaria infection both seasonally and overall (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]: 2.55; 95% CI: 2.28-2.85). The strength of association between travel and malaria infection varied by travelers' origin and destination, with those recently traveling to high-prevalence areas from low-prevalence areas experiencing the highest odds of malaria infection (AOR: 7.38). Long-lasting insecticidal net usage while traveling was associated with a relative reduction in infections (AOR: 0.74) compared with travelers not using a net. Although travel was directly associated with only a small fraction of infections, importation of malaria via human movement may play an increasingly important role in this elimination setting as transmission rates continue to decline.

Topics & Concepts

MalariaTransmission (telecommunications)Plasmodium falciparumOdds ratioDemographyOddsPopulationMass drug administrationIncidence (geometry)Environmental healthMosquito netMedicineGeographyImmunologyLogistic regressionInternal medicineSociologyEngineeringPathologyPhysicsOpticsElectrical engineeringMalaria Research and ControlMosquito-borne diseases and controlGlobal Maternal and Child Health
Recent Travel History and Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Infection in a Region of Heterogenous Transmission in Southern Province, Zambia | Litcius