Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding the role of local environmental risk factors for malaria in holo-endemic, poverty-stricken settings will be critical to more effectively implement- interventions aimed at eventual elimination. Household-level environmental drivers of malaria risk during the dry season were investigated in rural southern Malawi among children < five years old in two neighbouring rural Traditional Authority (TA) regions dominated by small-scale agriculture.MethodsTen villages were randomly selected from TA Sitola (n = 6) and Nsamala (n = 4). Within each village, during June to August 2011, a census was conducted of all households with children under-five and recorded their locations with a geographic position system (GPS) device. At each participating house, a nurse administered a malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) to children under five years of age, and a questionnaire to parents. Environmental data were collected for each house, including land cover within 50-m radius. Variables found to be significantly associated with P. falciparum infection status in bivariate analysis were included in generalized linear models, including multivariate logistic regression (MLR) and multi-level multivariate logistic regression (MLLR). Spatial clustering of RDT status, environmental factors, and Pearson residuals from MLR and MLLR were analysed using the Getis-Ord Gi* statistic.ResultsOf 390 children enrolled from six villages in Sitola (n = 162) and four villages in Nsamala (n = 228), 45.6% tested positive (n = 178) for Plasmodium infection by RDT. The MLLR modelled the statistical relationship of Plasmodium positives and household proximity to agriculture (<25-m radius), controlling for the child sex and age (in months), bed net ownership, elevation, and random effects intercepts for village and TA-level unmeasured factors. After controlling for area affects in MLLR, proximity to active agriculture remained a significant predictor of positive RDT result (OR 2.80, 95% CI 1.41-5.55). Mapping of Pearson residuals from MLR showed significant clustering (Gi* z > 2.58, p < 0.01) predominantly within TA Sitola, while residuals from MLLR showed no such clustering.ConclusionThis study provides evidence for significant, dry-season heterogeneity of malaria prevalence strongly linked to peridomestic land use, and particularly of elevated risk associated with nearby crop production.

Highlights

  • Understanding the role of local environmental risk factors for malaria in holo-endemic, povertystricken settings will be critical to more effectively implement- interventions aimed at eventual elimination

  • More recent surveys indicate that malaria prevalence in Machinga District during the early dry season among children under age five was 43%, while 37% were found to be parasitaemic by PCR [7]

  • These same variables were analysed in a generalized linear mixed model, multilevel, multivariate, logistic regression (MLLR) using PROC GLIMMIX, which allows for generalized linear mixed models, including random intercepts to account for potentially correlated data due to cluster sampling strategy

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the role of local environmental risk factors for malaria in holo-endemic, povertystricken settings will be critical to more effectively implement- interventions aimed at eventual elimination. Household-level environmental drivers of malaria risk during the dry season were investigated in rural southern Malawi among children < five years old in two neighbouring rural Traditional Authority (TA) regions dominated by small-scale agriculture. Young children in Malawi are burdened, averaging over one case per year, with little change in prevalence of malaria from 2001 to 2010 [1,2]. In Machinga District, Malawi, the study area of this report, 72,155 new malaria cases were reported during 2004– 2005 among under-five year old residents, who numbered 72,354, representing an average of one case per child per year [6]. More recent surveys indicate that malaria prevalence in Machinga District during the early dry season among children under age five was 43%, while 37% were found to be parasitaemic by PCR [7]

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