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Reductions in malaria and anaemia case and death burden at hospitals following scale-up of malaria control in Zanzibar, 1999-2008

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

BACKGROUND: In Zanzibar, the Ministry of Health and partners accelerated malaria control from September 2003 onwards. The impact of the scale-up of insecticide-treated nets (ITN), indoor-residual spraying (IRS) and artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT) combined on malaria burden was assessed at six out of seven in-patient health facilities. METHODS: Numbers of outpatient and inpatient cases and deaths were compared between 2008 and the pre-intervention period 1999-2003. Reductions were estimated by segmented log-linear regression, adjusting the effect size for time trends during the pre-intervention period. RESULTS: In 2008, for all age groups combined, malaria deaths had fallen by an estimated 90% (95% confidence interval 55-98%)(p<0.025), malaria in-patient cases by 78% (48-90%), and parasitologically-confirmed malaria out-patient cases by 99.5% (92-99.9%). Anaemia in-patient cases decreased by 87% (57-96%); anaemia deaths and out-patient cases declined without reaching statistical significance due to small numbers. Reductions were similar for children under-five and older ages. Among under-fives, the proportion of all-cause deaths due to malaria fell from 46% in 1999-2003 to 12% in 2008 (p<0.01) and that for anaemia from 26% to 4% (p<0.01). Cases and deaths due to other causes fluctuated or increased over 1999-2008, without consistent difference in the trend before and after 2003. CONCLUSIONS: Scaling-up effective malaria interventions reduced malaria-related burden at health facilities by over 75% within 5 years. In high-malaria settings, intensified malaria control can substantially contribute to reaching the Millennium Development Goal 4 target of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015.
Tijdschrift: Malaria Journal
ISSN: 1475-2875
Issue: 46
Volume: 10
Pagina's: 1-9
Jaar van publicatie:2011
Trefwoorden:Protozoal diseases, Malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, National programs, Control programs, Impregnated bednets, Insecticides, Residual spraying, Artemisinin combination therapies (ACT), ACT, Hospitalization, Outpatients, Mortality rates, Mortality reduction, Survival, Anemia, Children, Health impact, Efficiency, Zanzibar, Tanzania, Africa-East
  • Scopus Id: 79951559609
  • PubMed Id: 21332989