Abstract

BackgroundThe Australian Government's Pacific Malaria Initiative (PacMI) is supporting the National Malaria Program in both Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, complementing assistance from the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM). Two remote island groups - Tafea Province, Vanuatu and Temotu Province, Solomon Islands have been selected by the governments of both countries as possible malaria elimination areas. To provide information on the prevalence and distribution of the disease within these island groups, malariometric surveys were conducted during the wet seasons of 2008.MethodsIn Tafea Province, a school-based survey was conducted which included the 2-12 y age group, while in Temotu a village based all-ages survey was conducted. An effort was made to sample villages or schools from a wide an area as possible on all islands. Diagnosis was initially based on Giemsa stained blood slides followed by molecular analysis using polymerase chain reaction (PCR).ResultsIn Tafea Province, 73% (5238/7150) of children (2-12 y) were surveyed and in Temotu Province, in the all-ages survey, 50.2% (8742/17410) of the provincial population participated in the survey. In both Vanuatu and Solomon Islands malariometric surveys of their southern-most islands in 2008 showed relatively low over-all malaria parasite prevalence (2 to 3%). Other features of malaria in these island groups were low parasitaemia, low gametocyte carriage rates, low spleen rates, low malaria associated morbidity, a high incidence of asymptomatic infections, and a predominance of Plasmodium vivax over Plasmodium falciparum.ConclusionFor various reasons malaria rates are declining in these provinces providing a favourable situation for local malaria elimination. This will be advanced using mass distribution of bed nets and selective indoor residual spraying, the introduction of rapid diagnostic tests and artemisinin combination therapy, and intensive case detection and surveillance. It is as yet uncertain whether malaria parasites can themselves be sustainably eliminated from entire Melanesian islands, where they have previously been endemic. Key issues on the road to malaria elimination will be continued community involvement, improved field diagnostic methods and elimination of residual P. vivax parasites from the liver of asymptomatic persons.

Highlights

  • The Australian Government’s Pacific Malaria Initiative (PacMI) is supporting the National Malaria Program in both Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, complementing assistance from the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM)

  • The concentration of malaria parasitaemia on the main island of each province and relative paucity of parasites on the outer islands is a feature of both island groups

  • Some children with parasitaemia where found in the interior of Tanna, entomological and historical information lead us to think that many if not most of these infections were obtained while visiting the sea coast

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Summary

Introduction

The Australian Government’s Pacific Malaria Initiative (PacMI) is supporting the National Malaria Program in both Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, complementing assistance from the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM). The Melanesian nations of Vanuatu and Solomon Islands have been known for malaria from the reports of the earliest colonial observers; the parasites probably accompanied humans to the archipelagoes many millennia ago [1,2,3,4] Efforts to both quantitate and control malaria through the use of vector control measures such as indoor residual insecticide spraying (IRS) have been difficult due to a change in vector biting behaviour and glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and thalassaemia [12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20]. This proof of principle at the natural edge of malaria transmission suggested that shrinkage of the malaria map could occur from Melanesia [24]

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