| Literature DB >> 20398428 |
Emelda A Okiro1, Robert W Snow.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fever has traditionally served as the entry point for presumptive treatment of malaria in African children. However, recent changes in the epidemiology of malaria across many places in Africa would suggest that the predictive accuracy of a fever history as a marker of disease has changed prompting calls for the change to diagnosis-based treatment strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20398428 PMCID: PMC2867992 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-99
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Summary of national households surveys with data on Fever today: data assembled to define relationship between prevalence of fever and infection among children 0.5-4 years from national sample surveys in 6 African countries
| Country | ADMIN UNITS | Survey Date | RDT used | Total Seen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angola [ | 191 | Nov 2006-Apr 2007 | Paracheck Pf | 1433 |
| Djibouti [ | 62 | Dec 2008-Jan 2009 | Hexacon & ParaHit | 847 |
| Kenya [ | 7 | Jun 2007-Jul 2007 | Paracheck Pf | 4755 |
| Liberia [ | 153 | Dec 2008-Mar 2009 | Paracheck Pf | 1547 |
| Namibia5 | 94 | May 2009-Jun 2009 | Paracheck Pf | 1074 |
| Senegal [ | 11 | Nov 2008-Feb 2009 | Paracheck Pf | 3242 |
Notes:
1Data from Angola is reportedin three recognized malaria epidemiologic regions: Hyperendemic which covers six provinces: Cabinda, Uige, Kwanza N., Malange, Lunda N., Lunda S.; Mesoendemic Stable which includes: Zaire, Luanda, Bengo, Benguela, Kwanza S., Huambo, Bié and Mesoendemic Unstable which includes: Moxico, Kuando, Kubango, Kunene, Huila, Namibe
2Data from Djibouti has been split into two regions the Capital city which includes Arta and Djibouti Ville and Rural which includes the regions of Ali Sabieh, Ddikhil, Obock and Tadjourah.
3Data from Liberia is reported in six regions: Greater Monrovia; and five regional groupings formed by grouping the 15 counties: North Western: (Bomi, Grand Cape Mount, Gbarpolu); South Central: Montserrado (outside Monrovia), Margibi, Grand Bassa; South Eastern A: River Cess, Sinoe, Grand Gedeh; South Eastern B: River Gee, Grand Kru, Maryland; and North Central: Bong, Nimba, Lofa
4 For Namibia we combined data into 4 regional groups: group 1: Caprivi and neighbouring Kavango; group 2: Otjozondjupa and Omaheke; group 3: Oshikoto, Oshana, Ohangwena and Omusati and group 4 with data from Kunene
5 Petruni; personal communication.
Figure 1Graph showing the least-square linear regression line . Two lines surrounding the best-fit line (grey solid lines) define the confidence interval. We also show the point at which febrile infections exceeds 50% and the corresponding value for infection prevalence (black dotted horizontal and vertical lines) including a line illustrating the 50%-50% random chance of symptomatic infection.
Figure 2Graph showing the least-square linear regression line . Two lines surrounding the best-fit line (grey solid lines) define the confidence interval. We also show the point at which febrile infections exceeds 50% and the corresponding value for infection prevalence among the asymptomatic population (black dotted horizontal and vertical lines) including a line illustrating the 50%-50% random chance of symptomatic infection.