OBJECTIVE: To describe the epidemiological status of malaria in the Brazilian Amazon region between 2003 and 2012. METHODS: The present retrospective ecological study employed data from the Brazilian Epidemiological Surveillance and Malaria Communication System (SIVEP-Malária/SVS/MS), Hospital Admissions System (SIH/DATASUS/MS), and Mortality Information System (SIM). For each year, the percentage of Plasmodium falciparum cases, the number of admissions, and deaths and lethality due to malaria were determined. The distribution of P. falciparum cases in each state was also described. Data from 2012 were compared to data from 2005, when the Amazon region recorded a peak number of cases, and with data from 2011. RESULTS: In 2012, 241 806 malaria cases were recorded in the region, a reduction of 60.1% vs. 2005 and of 9.1% vs. 2011. Between 2003 and 2005, there was an increase of 48.3% in the number of cases, with 606 069 recorded cases in 2005. Since 2006, a declining trend in number of cases has been observed, especially for P. falciparum, with 155 169 cases notified in 2005 vs. 35 385 in 2012 (reduction of 77.2%). Between 2005 and 2012, the number of malaria hospital admissions (74,6%) and deaths (54,4%) was also reduced. CONCLUSIONS: Despite a decline in the number of malaria cases, the possible emergence of drug-resistant parasites and the lower frequency of P. falciparum indicate the need to adopt new surveillance strategies, more sensitive tools, and integrated vector management to achive a bold, but not impossible, goal: the elimination of P. falciparum.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the epidemiological status of malaria in the Brazilian Amazon region between 2003 and 2012. METHODS: The present retrospective ecological study employed data from the Brazilian Epidemiological Surveillance and Malaria Communication System (SIVEP-Malária/SVS/MS), Hospital Admissions System (SIH/DATASUS/MS), and Mortality Information System (SIM). For each year, the percentage of Plasmodium falciparum cases, the number of admissions, and deaths and lethality due to malaria were determined. The distribution of P. falciparum cases in each state was also described. Data from 2012 were compared to data from 2005, when the Amazon region recorded a peak number of cases, and with data from 2011. RESULTS: In 2012, 241 806 malaria cases were recorded in the region, a reduction of 60.1% vs. 2005 and of 9.1% vs. 2011. Between 2003 and 2005, there was an increase of 48.3% in the number of cases, with 606 069 recorded cases in 2005. Since 2006, a declining trend in number of cases has been observed, especially for P. falciparum, with 155 169 cases notified in 2005 vs. 35 385 in 2012 (reduction of 77.2%). Between 2005 and 2012, the number of malaria hospital admissions (74,6%) and deaths (54,4%) was also reduced. CONCLUSIONS: Despite a decline in the number of malaria cases, the possible emergence of drug-resistant parasites and the lower frequency of P. falciparum indicate the need to adopt new surveillance strategies, more sensitive tools, and integrated vector management to achive a bold, but not impossible, goal: the elimination of P. falciparum.
Authors: Rubens Alex de Oliveira Menezes; Margarete do Socorro Mendonça Gomes; Anapaula Martins Mendes; Álvaro Augusto Ribeiro D' Almeida Couto; Mathieu Nacher; Tamirys Simão Pimenta; Aline Collares Pinheiro de Sousa; Andrea Regina de Souza Baptista; Maria Izabel de Jesus; Martin Johannes Enk; Maristela Gomes Cunha; Ricardo Luiz Dantas Machado Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-01-02 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Vivian da Cruz Franco; Paulo Cesar Peiter; José Joaquim Carvajal-Cortés; Rafael Dos Santos Pereira; Margarete do Socorro Mendonça Gomes; Martha Cecilia Suárez-Mutis Journal: Trop Med Health Date: 2019-04-11