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Severe childhood malaria in two areas of markedly different falciparum transmission in east Africa.

Abstract:
Malaria remains a major public health challenge in sub-Saharan Africa, yet our knowledge of the epidemiology of malaria in terms of patterns of mortality and morbidity is limited. We have examined the presentation of severe, potentially life-threatening malaria to district hospitals in two very different transmission settings: Kilifi, Kenya with low seasonal transmission and Ifakara, Tanzania with high seasonal transmission. The minimum annual rates of severe disease in children below five years in both populations were similar (46 per 1000 children in Kilifi and 51 per 1000 children in Ifakara). However, there were important differences in the age and clinical patterns of severe disease; twice as many patients were under one year of age in Ifakara compared with Kilifi and there was a four fold higher rate of cerebral malaria and three fold lower rate of malaria anaemia among malaria patients at Kilifi compared with Ifakara. Reducing malaria transmission in Ifakara by 95%, for example with insecticide-treated bed nets, would result in a transmission setting comparable to that of Kilifi and although this reduction may yield early successes in reducing severe malaria morbidity and mortality in young, immunologically naive children, place these same children at increased risk at older ages of developing severe and potentially different manifestations of malaria infection hence producing no net cohort gain in survivorship from potentially fatal malaria.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/0001-706x(94)90074-4

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
Tropical Medicine
Role:
Author


Journal:
Acta tropica More from this journal
Volume:
57
Issue:
4
Pages:
289-300
Publication date:
1994-09-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1873-6254
ISSN:
0001-706X


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:44567
UUID:
uuid:2a09ed94-da91-4425-b8c3-93a292fb4a5e
Local pid:
pubs:44567
Source identifiers:
44567
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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