Abstract

BackgroundMaps of malaria distribution are vital for optimal allocation of resources for anti-malarial activities. There is a lack of reliable contemporary malaria maps in endemic countries in sub-Saharan Africa. This problem is particularly acute in low malaria transmission countries such as those located in the horn of Africa.MethodsData from a national malaria cluster sample survey in 2005 and routine cluster surveys in 2007 were assembled for Somalia. Rapid diagnostic tests were used to examine the presence of Plasmodium falciparum parasites in finger-prick blood samples obtained from individuals across all age-groups. Bayesian geostatistical models, with environmental and survey covariates, were used to predict continuous maps of malaria prevalence across Somalia and to define the uncertainty associated with the predictions.ResultsFor analyses the country was divided into north and south. In the north, the month of survey, distance to water, precipitation and temperature had no significant association with P. falciparum prevalence when spatial correlation was taken into account. In contrast, all the covariates, except distance to water, were significantly associated with parasite prevalence in the south. The inclusion of covariates improved model fit for the south but not for the north. Model precision was highest in the south. The majority of the country had a predicted prevalence of < 5%; areas with ≥ 5% prevalence were predominantly in the south.ConclusionThe maps showed that malaria transmission in Somalia varied from hypo- to meso-endemic. However, even after including the selected covariates in the model, there still remained a considerable amount of unexplained spatial variation in parasite prevalence, indicating effects of other factors not captured in the study. Nonetheless the maps presented here provide the best contemporary information on malaria prevalence in Somalia.

Highlights

  • Maps of malaria distribution are vital for optimal allocation of resources for anti-malarial activities

  • There have been a number of attempts to develop malaria transmission maps at different geographic scales based on expert opinion [3,4]; deterministic biological models driven by the conceptual relationship between transmission and environmental covariates [5]; and empirical transmission models based on entomological inoculation rates [6,7] or human infection prevalence data [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]

  • The greatest need for malaria maps is at the periphery of stable, endemic areas where decisions about the delivery of standard suites of interventions, such as those promoted by the Roll Back Malaria (RBM) initiative to support malaria control in high transmission areas, may become less appropriate or cost-efficient

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Summary

Introduction

Maps of malaria distribution are vital for optimal allocation of resources for anti-malarial activities. There have been a number of attempts to develop malaria transmission maps at different geographic scales based on expert opinion [3,4]; deterministic biological models driven by the conceptual relationship between transmission and environmental covariates [5]; and empirical transmission models based on entomological inoculation rates [6,7] or human infection prevalence data [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17] These methods suffer several limitations: expert opinion maps are subjective; deterministic models ignore the secular effects of expanded coverage of interventions that supersede the influence of climate on the epidemiology of malaria and do not quantify uncertainty around model results. In areas of perceived low malaria risk there is little empirical information on the risks and intensity of transmission As such the semi-arid regions of the horn of Africa remain less well described epidemiologically compared to the rest of malaria endemic sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and there are no contemporary national maps of the extents of malaria risk.

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