| Literature DB >> 29132357 |
Justin M Cohen1, Arnaud Le Menach2, Emilie Pothin3, Thomas P Eisele4, Peter W Gething5, Philip A Eckhoff6, Bruno Moonen7, Allan Schapira8, David L Smith9.
Abstract
There is a long history of considering the constituent components of malaria risk and the malaria transmission cycle via the use of mathematical models, yet strategic planning in endemic countries tends not to take full advantage of available disease intelligence to tailor interventions. National malaria programmes typically make operational decisions about where to implement vector control and surveillance activities based upon simple categorizations of annual parasite incidence. With technological advances, an enormous opportunity exists to better target specific malaria interventions to the places where they will have greatest impact by mapping and evaluating metrics related to a variety of risk components, each of which describes a different facet of the transmission cycle. Here, these components and their implications for operational decision-making are reviewed. For each component, related mappable malaria metrics are also described which may be measured and evaluated by malaria programmes seeking to better understand the determinants of malaria risk. Implementing tailored programmes based on knowledge of the heterogeneous distribution of the drivers of malaria transmission rather than only consideration of traditional metrics such as case incidence has the potential to result in substantial improvements in decision-making. As programmes improve their ability to prioritize their available tools to the places where evidence suggests they will be most effective, elimination aspirations may become increasingly feasible.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Health policy; Malaria; Operational planning; Risk mapping
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29132357 PMCID: PMC5683539 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-2106-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Components of malaria risk and relationships between them. Malaria risk can be considered as the combination of epidemiological factors typically measured programmatically (yellow boxes), factors influencing transmission rates (blue boxes), and measures of transmission potential or intensity (green boxes). Incident infections acquired both locally or imported replenish the parasite reservoir, with parasites persisting according to the human infection duration. The transmission intensity, which generates new local incidence, is determined by the combination of the human parasite reservoir and the entomological potential for transmission of that reservoir. Together, the mosquito-related entomological potential and the human-related infection duration largely comprise the transmission potential of a place, which describes the risk of malaria propagating there even if no parasites are currently circulating. Red boxes illustrate the interventions that reduce specific risk components
Examples of how spatial overlay of multiple malaria metrics related to different components of malaria risk can inform elimination planning for a given operational unit
| Malaria risk component | Proxy mappable metric | Information for decision-making | Example operational implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infection incidence | Annual parasite incidence | How much malaria is observed in the area? | Distribution of malaria drug demand; feasibility of implementing case-based surveillance |
| Local infection incidence | Local case incidence | Is transmission happening in the region? | Need for transmission intensity-reducing measures |
| Imported infections | Importation rate, human movement rate to endemic locations | Will new infections appear even if the local reservoir is drained? | Sustainability of aggressive reservoir reductions; need for importation-reducing measures |
| Parasite reservoir | Infection prevalence | Are infections currently available to be transmitted? | Potential for drug-based interventions to reduce transmission intensity by draining the available reservoir |
| Infection duration | Case treatment rate | How long will infections be available for mosquitoes to transmit? | Need for improved access to case management |
| Entomological potential | Vectorial capacity | What is the probability that parasites in the human reservoir will be transmitted? | Need for context-appropriate vector control measures |
| Transmission intensity | Entomological inoculation rate, ratio of local to imported cases | How much transmission is currently occurring? | Impact of currently implemented measures; need to examine specific risk components to identify appropriate additional measures |
| Transmission potential | Reproductive rates | Will introduced parasites tend to propagate or die away? | Need for reductions in infection duration or entomological potential to create conditions suitable for elimination |