| Literature DB >> 28049475 |
Betty Bawuba Tukei1, Andy Beke2, Héctor Lamadrid-Figueroa3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Indoor residual spraying (IRS) is known to reduce malaria transmission. In northern Uganda, a high endemic area, IRS has been implemented since 2006. Limited data however, exists on the effect of IRS on the malaria burden. This study sought to assess the effect of IRS on malaria morbidity in the high intensity area of northern Uganda. Retrospective routine data from ten health facilities in three districts which had received at least five rounds of IRS in northern Uganda was analysed. The primary outcome of interest was malaria morbidity, measured by the slide positivity rate (SPR). Descriptive statistics were used to describe the malaria morbidity stratified by age and sex. The average change in the malaria morbidity, measured by the SPR was assessed according to time, measured as calendar months. A fixed-effects linear regression model was used which included a polynomial function of time and controlled for malaria seasonality and variations between districts/facilities.Entities:
Keywords: Indoor residual spraying (IRS); Malaria morbidity; Slide positivity rate (SPR)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28049475 PMCID: PMC5209922 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1652-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Characteristics of the study population
| District | Facility | Total OPD attendance | OPD female (% of total OPD) | OPD <5 years (% of total OPD) | Malaria diagnosis (% of total OPD) | Malaria diagnosis <5 years (% of total diagnosis) | Total BS tests done | Positive BS (SPR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apac | Aduku HCIV | 150,090 | 90,625 (60.4) | 51,249 (34.1) | 45,120 (30.1) | 25,208 (55.9) | 58,884 | 23,362 (39.7) |
| Gulu | Lacor Hospital | 845,254 | 515,362 (61.0) | 286,836 (33.9) | 164,117 (19.4) | 110,229 (67.2) | 289,288 | 95,207 (32.9) |
| Military Hospital | 54,399 | 22,343 (41.1) | 13,330 (24.5) | 18,331 (33.7) | 5000 (27.3) | 11,347 | 2981 (26.3) | |
| GRRH | 246,216 | 152,137 (61.8) | 48,654 (19.8) | 73,620 (29.9) | 25,406 (34.5) | 24,698 | 8539 (34.6) | |
| Lalogi HCIV | 142,211 | 85,412 (60.1) | 52,419 (36.9) | 36,032 (25.3) | 18,784 (52.1) | 26,092 | 15,299 (58.6) | |
| Gulu Independent | 44,130 | 23,557 (53.4) | 6382 (14.5) | 4969 (11.3) | 1574 (31.7) | 16,802 | 2640 (15.7) | |
| Awach HCIV | 86,815 | 56,469 (65.0) | 27,615 (31.8) | 35,123 (40.5) | 15,468 (44.0) | 7462 | 2264 (30.3) | |
| Kitgum | KGH | 387,499 | 226,537 (58.5) | 114,172 (29.5) | 126,286 (32.6) | 58,166 (46.1) | 91,442 | 38,229 (41.8) |
| SJH | 187,745 | 105,085 (56.0) | 71,644 (38.2) | 65,346 (34.8) | 37,771 (57.8) | 75,915 | 30,097 (39.6) | |
| Namokora HCIV | 173,438 | 93,578 (54.0) | 58,417 (33.7) | 45,483 (26.2) | 20,697 (45.5) | 5857 | 2798 (47.8) | |
| Total | 2,779,246 | 1,652,054 (59.4%) | 876,584 (31.5%) | 736,034 (26.5%) | 374,826 (50.9%) | 664,000 | 244,417 (37.5) |
OPD Out patients Department, BS blood slide, SPR slide positivity rate, HCIV Health Centre IV, GRRH Gulu Regional Referral Hospital, KGH Kitgum Government Hospital, SJH St. Joseph’ Hospital
Regression results adjusted for variations at facility level
| Timing in relation to IRS | p.p. change | p value | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower boundary | Upper boundary | |||
| Percentage change in total SPR | ||||
| 1 month after IRS | −3.45 | 0.208 | −8.86 | 1.95 |
| 2 month after IRS | −6.04 | 0.037 | −11.73 | −0.36 |
| 3 month after IRS | −6.53 | 0.040 | −12.74 | −0.31 |
| 4 month after IRS | −0.17 | 0.958 | −6.53 | 6.19 |
| 5 month after IRS | −2.74 | 0.461 | −10.05 | 4.58 |
| 6 month after IRS | 5.27 | 0.655 | −18.04 | 28.58 |
| Percentage change in SPR <5 years | ||||
| 1 month after IRS | −2.19 | 0.503 | −8.64 | 4.27 |
| 2 month after IRS | −1.24 | 0.718 | −8.03 | 5.55 |
| 3 month after IRS | −3.36 | 0.372 | −10.77 | 4.06 |
| 4 month after IRS | 2.78 | 0.470 | −4.80 | 10.35 |
| 5 month after IRS | −1.34 | 0.764 | −10.13 | 7.45 |
| 6 month after IRS | 0.76 | 0.960 | −29.37 | 30.89 |
| Percentage change in SPR >5 years | ||||
| 1 month after IRS | −4.03 | 0.317 | −11.95 | 3.90 |
| 2 month after IRS | −9.50 | 0.026 | −17.85 | −1.17 |
| 3 month after IRS | −8.18 | 0.079 | −17.31 | 0.95 |
| 4 month after IRS | 0.73 | 0.876 | −8.58 | 10.04 |
| 5 month after IRS | −3.40 | 0.533 | −14.16 | 7.36 |
| 6 month after IRS | 7.95 | 0.647 | −26.25 | 42.14 |
p.p change percentage point change
Regression results showing percentage point change in total SPR adjusted for variations at district level
| Timing in relation to IRS | Percentage point change | p value | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower boundary | Upper boundary | |||
| 1 month after IRS | −4.18 | 0.157 | −9.98 | 1.63 |
| 2 month after IRS | −6.48 | 0.037 | −12.55 | −0.41 |
| 3 month after IRS | −7.11 | 0.038 | −13.80 | −0.41 |
| 4 month after IRS | −0.39 | 0.912 | −7.27 | 6.50 |
| 5 month after IRS | −2.97 | 0.459 | −10.87 | 4.93 |
| 6 month after IRS | 8.37 | 0.510 | −16.66 | 33.39 |
Two linear fixed effects regression models were regressed on the SPR as the outcome variable both at district and hospital level. The models are shown below
Hospital model SPR = β0 + β1 (time) + β2 (months past after spraying) + β3 (Hospital)
District model SPR = β0 + β1 (time) + β2 (months past after spraying) + β3 (District)
The regression results adjusted for variations at district level and the adjusted confidence intervals of the percentage changes in the SPR 6 months after IRS reveal the same results with a decrease in the SPR 1–3 months after IRS which wanes out in the fourth month following IRS. The same results are obtained when the SPR is analysed by age category as shown in Table 6. The SPR increases by the sixth month when compared to the spray month, the reference month = zero
Percentage point change in the SPR adjusted for variations at district and facility level following IRS
| Change | p value | 95% confidence interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower boundary | Upper boundary | |||
| Percentage point change in the SPR at district level | ||||
| District | ||||
| Gulu | −8.59 | 0.006 | −14.62 | −2.56 |
| Kitgum | −4.42 | 0.083 | −9.42 | 0.58 |
| Percentage point change in the SPR at facility level | ||||
| Facility | ||||
| Awach HCIV | −10.47 | 0.032 | −20.00 | −0.94 |
| GRRH | −3.48 | 0.620 | −17.35 | 10.38 |
| Gulu Independent | −22.02 | 0.000 | −33.90 | −10.13 |
| Kitgum Hospital | −0.88 | 0.734 | −6.02 | 4.25 |
| Lacor | −10.16 | 0.062 | −20.83 | 0.51 |
| Lalogi HCIV | 6.04 | 0.235 | −3.97 | 16.05 |
| Military Hospital | −11.42 | 0.015 | −20.53 | −2.28 |
| Namokora HCIV | 2.22 | 0.682 | −8.48 | 12.93 |
| St. Joseph | −9.35 | 0.001 | −14.59 | −4.11 |
This table highlights the percentage point differences in the SPR between districts with Apac district as the reference district and the percentage point differences in the SPR between facilities with Aduku HCIV as the reference facility. In general, the percentage point changes in the SPR adjusted for variations at facility and district level show a declining trend as compared to the reference points
Fig. 1Trend of changes in the SPR in the months following IRS
Fig. 2Change in the SPR over time by age category
Annual SPR at facility level across the study period
| Hospital | SPR 2007 | SPR 2008 | SPR 2009 | SPR 2010 | SPR 2011 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aduku | 62.60 | 35.29 | 43.96 | 41.65 | 22.32 |
| St. Joseph’s | 42.87 | 44.34 | 56.37 | 33.92 | 6.74 |
| KGH | 48.69 | 43.19 | 43.59 | 41.55 | 20.16 |
| Lacor | 34.29 | 26.40 | 41.15 | 36.32 | 6.06 |
| Military | 39.22 | 20.12 | 31.00 | 24.48 | 16.48 |
| Namokora HCIV | 32.59 | 68.46 | 72.32 | 42.87 | 23.58 |
| Gulu Independent | 11.71 | 10.47 | 34.63 | 20.48 | 6.98 |
| Lalogi HCIV | 65.36 | 57.47 | 67.43 | 52.72 | 31.05 |
| Awach HCIV | 21.92 | 25.64 | 46.02 | 33.56 | 6.79 |
| GRRH | 26.91 | 30.43 | 39.93 | 35.19 | 21.70 |
KGH Kitgum Government Hospital, GRRH Gulu Regional Referral Hospital
Adjusted confidence intervals of the percentage point changes in the SPR at facility level
| Months past after IRS | xb | lb | ub |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall SPR | |||
| 0 | 27.61 | 23.20 | 32.02 |
| 1 | 24.16 | 20.00 | 28.31 |
| 2 | 21.57 | 17.18 | 25.95 |
| 3 | 21.08 | 15.89 | 26.28 |
| 4 | 27.44 | 21.99 | 32.88 |
| 5 | 24.87 | 18.38 | 31.37 |
| 6 | 32.88 | 10.00 | 55.76 |
| SPR <5 years | |||
| 0 | 29.97 | 24.70 | 35.25 |
| 1 | 27.79 | 22.81 | 32.76 |
| 2 | 28.73 | 23.47 | 33.99 |
| 3 | 26.62 | 20.41 | 32.82 |
| 4 | 32.75 | 26.26 | 39.24 |
| 5 | 28.64 | 20.78 | 36.50 |
| 6 | 30.74 | 1.049 | 60.42 |
| SPR >5 years | |||
| 0 | 26.53 | 20.05 | 33.00 |
| 1 | 22.50 | 16.41 | 28.60 |
| 2 | 17.02 | 10.57 | 23.48 |
| 3 | 18.35 | 10.70 | 26.00 |
| 4 | 27.26 | 19.30 | 35.23 |
| 5 | 23.13 | 13.54 | 32.71 |
| 6 | 34.47 | 0.92 | 68.02 |
xb linear prediction, lb 95% confidence interval, lower boundary, ub 95% confidence interval, upper boundary
Fig. 3Monthly trends in the SPR in five health facilities
Fig. 4Monthly change in SPR for Aduku, Gulu regional referral and St. Joseph. There was a declining trend in the SPR in the months following IRS across the 60 months study period, which shows a declining trend in the SPR percentage points from three facilities; one from each district
Fig. 5Monthly percentage point change in SPR for the three study districts over the study period. The figure illustrates the trend in the SPR percentage point in the 60 months’ study period at district level. A declining trend was observed in the SPR percentage points in all the three districts