Abstract

BackgroundEfficient allocation of resources to intervene against malaria requires a detailed understanding of the contemporary spatial distribution of malaria risk. It is exactly 40 y since the last global map of malaria endemicity was published. This paper describes the generation of a new world map of Plasmodium falciparum malaria endemicity for the year 2007.Methods and FindingsA total of 8,938 P. falciparum parasite rate (PfPR) surveys were identified using a variety of exhaustive search strategies. Of these, 7,953 passed strict data fidelity tests for inclusion into a global database of PfPR data, age-standardized to 2–10 y for endemicity mapping. A model-based geostatistical procedure was used to create a continuous surface of malaria endemicity within previously defined stable spatial limits of P. falciparum transmission. These procedures were implemented within a Bayesian statistical framework so that the uncertainty of these predictions could be evaluated robustly. The uncertainty was expressed as the probability of predicting correctly one of three endemicity classes; previously stratified to be an informative guide for malaria control. Population at risk estimates, adjusted for the transmission modifying effects of urbanization in Africa, were then derived with reference to human population surfaces in 2007. Of the 1.38 billion people at risk of stable P. falciparum malaria, 0.69 billion were found in Central and South East Asia (CSE Asia), 0.66 billion in Africa, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia (Africa+), and 0.04 billion in the Americas. All those exposed to stable risk in the Americas were in the lowest endemicity class (PfPR2−10 ≤ 5%). The vast majority (88%) of those living under stable risk in CSE Asia were also in this low endemicity class; a small remainder (11%) were in the intermediate endemicity class (PfPR2−10 > 5 to < 40%); and the remaining fraction (1%) in high endemicity (PfPR2−10 ≥ 40%) areas. High endemicity was widespread in the Africa+ region, where 0.35 billion people are at this level of risk. Most of the rest live at intermediate risk (0.20 billion), with a smaller number (0.11 billion) at low stable risk.ConclusionsHigh levels of P. falciparum malaria endemicity are common in Africa. Uniformly low endemic levels are found in the Americas. Low endemicity is also widespread in CSE Asia, but pockets of intermediate and very rarely high transmission remain. There are therefore significant opportunities for malaria control in Africa and for malaria elimination elsewhere. This 2007 global P. falciparum malaria endemicity map is the first of a series with which it will be possible to monitor and evaluate the progress of this intervention process.

Highlights

  • Maps are essential for all aspects of the coordination of malaria control [1]

  • This paper describes the generation of a new world map of Plasmodium falciparum malaria endemicity for the year 2007

  • High levels of P. falciparum malaria endemicity are common in Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Maps are essential for all aspects of the coordination of malaria control [1]. In an international policy environment where the malaria control community has been challenged to rethink the plausibility of malaria elimination [2,3,4], malaria cartography will become an increasingly important tool for planning, implementing, and measuring the impact of malaria interventions worldwide. Geographic Scope of the Modelling The global spatial limits of P. falciparum malaria transmission have been mapped recently by triangulating nationally reported case incidence data, other medical intelligence, and biological rules of transmission exclusion, derived from temperature and aridity limits to the bionomics of locally dominant Anopheles vectors [17,18]. The results of this exercise stratified the world into three classes: the spatial representation of no risk, unstable risk (P. falciparum annual parasite incidence [PfAPI] , 0.1 per 1,000 people per annum [pa]), and stable risk Effective treatment with antimalarial drugs helps to decrease malaria transmission

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