Abstract

BackgroundPrevious research on determinants of malaria in Burkina Faso has largely focused on individual risk factors. Malaria risk, however, is also shaped by community, health system, and climatic/environmental characteristics. The aims of this study were: i) to identify such individual, household, community, and climatic/environmental risk factors for malaria in children under five years of age, and ii) to produce a parasitaemia risk map of Burkina Faso.MethodsThe 2010 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) was the first in Burkina Faso that tested children for malaria parasitaemia. Multilevel and geo-statistical models were used to explore determinants of malaria using this nationally representative database.ResultsParasitaemia was collected from 6,102 children, of which 66.0% (95% confidence interval (CI): 64.0-68.0%) were positive for Plasmodium spp. Older children (>23 months) were more likely to be parasitaemic than younger ones, while children from wealthier households and whose mother had higher education were at a lower risk. At the community level, living in a district with a rate of attendance to health facilities lower than 2 visits per year was significantly associated with greater odds of being infected. Malaria prevalence was also associated with higher normalized difference vegetation index, lower average monthly rainfall, and lower population densities. Predicted malaria parasitaemia was spatially variable with locations falling within an 11%-92% prevalence range. The number of parasitaemic children was nonetheless concentrated in areas of high population density, albeit malaria risk was notably higher in the sparsely populated rural areas.ConclusionMalaria prevalence in Burkina Faso is considerably higher than in neighbouring countries. Our spatially-explicit population-based estimates of malaria risk and infected number of children could be used by local decision-makers to identify priority areas where control efforts should be enhanced.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1756-3305-7-350) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • La recherche sur les déterminants du paludisme au Burkina Faso a permis d’identifier de nombreux facteurs liés aux caractéristiques individuelles

  • Sample characteristics The total number of households selected for the survey was 4,029 in 572 communities, and microscopy data were available for 6,102 children

  • The weighted prevalence of malaria in Burkina Faso was estimated at 66.0% ranging for 27.7% in the Central Region to 77.7% in the Sud Ouest Region (Additional file 2: Figure S1)

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Summary

Introduction

La recherche sur les déterminants du paludisme au Burkina Faso a permis d’identifier de nombreux facteurs liés aux caractéristiques individuelles. The aims of this study were: i) to identify such individual, household, community, and climatic/ environmental risk factors for malaria in children under five years of age, and ii) to produce a parasitaemia risk map of Burkina Faso. Among children under five years of age, malaria accounted for 61.4% of medical consultations, 77.7% of hospitalizations, and was responsible for almost 80% of deaths in 2011 [2] These figures provide an incomplete estimate of the total malaria burden in this country because many Burkinabé lack proper access to health care services and are not accounted for in the statistics presented above

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