Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania

Abstract Background A nationwide, school, malaria survey was implemented to assess the risk factors of malaria prevalence and bed net use among primary school children in mainland Tanzania. This allowed the mapping of malaria prevalence at council level and assessment of malaria risk factors among s...

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Main Authors: Frank Chacky, Manuela Runge, Susan F. Rumisha, Pendael Machafuko, Prosper Chaki, Julius J. Massaga, Ally Mohamed, Emilie Pothin, Fabrizio Molteni, Robert W. Snow, Christian Lengeler, Renata Mandike
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2601-1
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spelling doaj-2c70269b849a4ccfab5bb6d06cc8caf12020-11-25T00:53:56ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752018-12-0117111610.1186/s12936-018-2601-1Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of TanzaniaFrank Chacky0Manuela Runge1Susan F. Rumisha2Pendael Machafuko3Prosper Chaki4Julius J. Massaga5Ally Mohamed6Emilie Pothin7Fabrizio Molteni8Robert W. Snow9Christian Lengeler10Renata Mandike11Ministry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly, and ChildrenSwiss Tropical and Public Health InstituteNational Institute for Medical ResearchNational Malaria Control ProgrammeIfakara Health InstituteNational Institute for Medical ResearchMinistry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly, and ChildrenSwiss Tropical and Public Health InstituteNational Malaria Control ProgrammeKEMRI-Welcome Trust Research ProgrammeSwiss Tropical and Public Health InstituteMinistry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly, and ChildrenAbstract Background A nationwide, school, malaria survey was implemented to assess the risk factors of malaria prevalence and bed net use among primary school children in mainland Tanzania. This allowed the mapping of malaria prevalence at council level and assessment of malaria risk factors among school children. Methods A cross-sectional, school, malaria parasitaemia survey was conducted in 25 regions, 166 councils and 357 schools in three phases: (1) August to September 2014; (2) May 2015; and, (3) October 2015. Children were tested for malaria parasites using rapid diagnostic tests and were interviewed about household information, parents’ education, bed net indicators as well as recent history of fever. Multilevel mixed effects logistic regression models were fitted to estimate odds ratios of risk factors for malaria infection and for bed net use while adjusting for school effect. Results In total, 49,113 children were interviewed and tested for malaria infection. The overall prevalence of malaria was 21.6%, ranging from < 0.1 to 53% among regions and from 0 to 76.4% among councils. The malaria prevalence was below 5% in 62 of the 166 councils and above 50% in 18 councils and between 5 and 50% in the other councils. The variation of malaria prevalence between schools was greatest in regions with a high mean prevalence, while the variation was marked by a few outlying schools in regions with a low mean prevalence. Overall, 70% of the children reported using mosquito nets, with the highest percentage observed among educated parents (80.7%), low land areas (82.7%) and those living in urban areas (82.2%). Conclusions The observed prevalence among school children showed marked variation at regional and sub-regional levels across the country. Findings of this survey are useful for updating the malaria epidemiological profile and for stratification of malaria transmission by region, council and age groups, which is essential for guiding resource allocation, evaluation and prioritization of malaria interventions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2601-1MalariaSchool childrenMalaria surveillanceMalaria prevalenceMosquito net useTanzania
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frank Chacky
Manuela Runge
Susan F. Rumisha
Pendael Machafuko
Prosper Chaki
Julius J. Massaga
Ally Mohamed
Emilie Pothin
Fabrizio Molteni
Robert W. Snow
Christian Lengeler
Renata Mandike
spellingShingle Frank Chacky
Manuela Runge
Susan F. Rumisha
Pendael Machafuko
Prosper Chaki
Julius J. Massaga
Ally Mohamed
Emilie Pothin
Fabrizio Molteni
Robert W. Snow
Christian Lengeler
Renata Mandike
Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
Malaria Journal
Malaria
School children
Malaria surveillance
Malaria prevalence
Mosquito net use
Tanzania
author_facet Frank Chacky
Manuela Runge
Susan F. Rumisha
Pendael Machafuko
Prosper Chaki
Julius J. Massaga
Ally Mohamed
Emilie Pothin
Fabrizio Molteni
Robert W. Snow
Christian Lengeler
Renata Mandike
author_sort Frank Chacky
title Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
title_short Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
title_full Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
title_fullStr Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the United Republic of Tanzania
title_sort nationwide school malaria parasitaemia survey in public primary schools, the united republic of tanzania
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background A nationwide, school, malaria survey was implemented to assess the risk factors of malaria prevalence and bed net use among primary school children in mainland Tanzania. This allowed the mapping of malaria prevalence at council level and assessment of malaria risk factors among school children. Methods A cross-sectional, school, malaria parasitaemia survey was conducted in 25 regions, 166 councils and 357 schools in three phases: (1) August to September 2014; (2) May 2015; and, (3) October 2015. Children were tested for malaria parasites using rapid diagnostic tests and were interviewed about household information, parents’ education, bed net indicators as well as recent history of fever. Multilevel mixed effects logistic regression models were fitted to estimate odds ratios of risk factors for malaria infection and for bed net use while adjusting for school effect. Results In total, 49,113 children were interviewed and tested for malaria infection. The overall prevalence of malaria was 21.6%, ranging from < 0.1 to 53% among regions and from 0 to 76.4% among councils. The malaria prevalence was below 5% in 62 of the 166 councils and above 50% in 18 councils and between 5 and 50% in the other councils. The variation of malaria prevalence between schools was greatest in regions with a high mean prevalence, while the variation was marked by a few outlying schools in regions with a low mean prevalence. Overall, 70% of the children reported using mosquito nets, with the highest percentage observed among educated parents (80.7%), low land areas (82.7%) and those living in urban areas (82.2%). Conclusions The observed prevalence among school children showed marked variation at regional and sub-regional levels across the country. Findings of this survey are useful for updating the malaria epidemiological profile and for stratification of malaria transmission by region, council and age groups, which is essential for guiding resource allocation, evaluation and prioritization of malaria interventions.
topic Malaria
School children
Malaria surveillance
Malaria prevalence
Mosquito net use
Tanzania
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2601-1
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