| Literature DB >> 26911433 |
Simon Chihanga1, Ubydul Haque2,3, Emmanuel Chanda4, Tjantilili Mosweunyane5, Kense Moakofhi6, Haruna Baba Jibril7, Mpho Motlaleng8, Wenyi Zhang9, Gregory E Glass10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Botswana significantly reduced its malaria burden between 2000 and 2012. Incidence dropped from 0.99 to 0.01 % and deaths attributed to malaria declined from 12 to 3. The country initiated elimination strategies in October 2012. We examine the progress and challenges during implementation and identify future needs for a successful program in Botswana.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26911433 PMCID: PMC4765051 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1382-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1The policies and attributed changes in malaria case numbers in Botswana, 1985–2014 (Source: NMP, Botswana) [1996: Use of Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) adopted; 1998: Sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine (SP) replaced Chloroquinine (CQ) as first line treatment for uncomplicated malaria; 2006: Target halving malaria burden by 2011 from 2006 baseline and use of RDTs; 2007: Lumefantrine–artemether (AL) replaced SP as first line treatment for uncomplicated malaria; 2010: Free mass LLINs distributed. Malaria elimination plan launched; 2012: Case based surveillance launched]
Fig. 2Malaria endemic countries around Botswana [59]
Fig. 3Flow of malaria data from health facility to National Malaria Program (NMP)
Fig. 4Malaria Cases by age and sex, Oct 2012–Dec 2014 (Blue bar shows male and red bar shows female)
Fig. 5Seasonality of malaria cases in Botswana (Case-based surveillance started in October, 2012. Red color represents 2012, green 2013 and blue 2014 respectively)
Fig. 6Malaria hot spots in Botswana (October 2012–December, 2014) [new hot spot: the most recent time step interval was hot and detected for the first time; oscillating hot spots: some of the time step intervals were hot, some were cold. last time step was not hot; sporadic: some of the time step intervals were hot]
Cases investigated, screened and positive cases from screening at district level between October, 2012 to December, 2014
| District | Cases reported through IDSRb | Number notified individually | Cases investigated | Total screened | Positive cases from screening |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Okavango | 1090 | 634 | 52 | 343 | 4 |
| Ngami | 152 | 74 | 35 | 421 | 14 |
| Chobe | 134 | 134 | 98 | 1026 | 6 |
| Bobirwa | 103 | 58 | 28 | 467 | 0 |
| Boteti | 14 | 44 | 2 | 20 | 0 |
| Mahalapye | 52 | 23 | 12 | 290 | 0 |
| Francistown | 14 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Kgatleng | 17 | 20 | 7 | 34 | 6 |
| Palapye | 69 | 39 | 21 | 484 | 2 |
| Tutume | 35 | 29 | 8 | 20 | 0 |
| Gaborone | 37 | 26 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
| Serowe | 26 | 26 | 6 | 47 | 0 |
| SPTC | 20 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Kweneng East | 20 | 14 | 6 | 82 | 4 |
| Totala | 1808 | 1148 | 277 | 3237 | 37 |
aOnly districts reported more than five cases through IDSR has presented here (complete table: supplement section). bIntegrated Disease Surveillance System
Fig. 7Imported malaria in Botswana (October 2012–December, 2014)
Imported cases by country of origin between October, 2012 to December, 2014
| Country of Origin | Number of cases (%) |
|---|---|
| DRC | 2 (2.9) |
| Ghana | 2 (2.9) |
| Malawi | 7 (10) |
| Mozambique | 6 (8.7) |
| Namibia | 1 (1.5) |
| South Africa | 2 (2.9) |
| South Africa | 1 (1.5) |
| South Sudan | 1 (1.5) |
| Zambia | 19 (27) |
| Zimbabwe | 28 (41) |
| Total | 69 (100) |