| Literature DB >> 26285699 |
Olivier Maillard1, Tinne Lernout2,3, Sophie Olivier4, Aboubacar Achirafi5, Lydéric Aubert6, Jean François Lepère7, Julien Thiria8, Frédéric Pagès9, Laurent Filleul10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for most malaria cases on Mayotte Island, in the Comorian Archipelago. Malaria is endemic and a major public health problem in the archipelago with an intense, stable and permanent transmission. This study reports results of 8 years of malaria surveillance from 2007 to 2014 after the strengthening of malaria control activities in Mayotte and the neighbouring islands.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26285699 PMCID: PMC4545551 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0837-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Map and location of Mayotte
Fig. 2a Evolution of the annual incidence of malaria in Mayotte, 2007–2014. b Evolution of the annual incidence of autochthonous malaria in Mayotte, 2007–2014. c Evolution of the annual incidence of imported malaria in Mayotte, 2007–2014
Fig. 3Evolution of the global malaria incidence by district in Mayotte, 2007–2014
Fig. 4Distribution of malaria cases in % by age class and gender in Mayotte, 2007–2014
Fig. 5Distribution by month and year of the average rainfall in mm and of the number of autochthonous and imported malaria cases in Mayotte in relation to timing of malaria control interventions in the Comorian Archipelago, 2007–2014
WHO criteria for classifying Mayotte according to the malaria program phase, (source: WHO malaria report [15])
| Pre-elimination | Elimination | Prevention of reintroduction | Mayotte situation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Test positivity rate | ≤5% among suspected malaria patients (PCD) throughout the year | Yes | ||
| API in the district with the highest number of cases/1000 population/year (ACD and PCD)**, average over the last two years | <5 (less than 5 cases/1,000 population) | <1 (less than 1 case/1,000 population) | Yes | |
| Total number of reported malaria cases nationwide | A manageable number e.g. <1000 cases nationwide (local & imported) | Yes | ||
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| All cases detected in the private sector are microscopically confirmed | National policy being rolled out | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| All cases detected in the public sector are microscopically confirmed | National policy being rolled out | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Nationwide microscopy quality assurance system covers public and private sector | Initiated | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Radical treatment with primaquine for | National policy being updated | National policy fully implemented | Yes | Yes |
| Treatment with ACT plus single dose of primaquine for | National policy being updated | National policy fully implemented | Yes | National policy being updated |
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| Malaria is a notifiable disease nationwide (<24–48 h) | Laws and systems being put in place | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Centralized register of cases, foci and vectors | Initiated | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Malaria elimination database | Initiated | Yes | Certification process (optional) | Yes |
| Active case detection in groups at high risk or with poor access to services (“proactive” case detection) | Initiated | Yes | In residual and cleared-up foci, among high risk population groups | Initiated |
| Case and foci investigation and classification (including “reactive” case detection and entomological investigation) | Initiated | Yes | Yes | Yes |
ACD active case detection, PCD passive case detection
* Ongoing local transmission = 2 consecutive years of local P. falciparum transmission, or 3 consecutive years of local P. vivax transmission in the same locality or otherwise epidemiologically linked.
** The API has to be evaluated against the diagnostic activity in the risk area (measured as the ABER), low values of ABER in a district raise the possibility that more cases would be found with improved diagnostic efforts.