| Literature DB >> 29471832 |
Daniel J Bridges1, Derek Pollard1, Anna M Winters2,3, Benjamin Winters1,4, Chadwick Sikaala5, Silvia Renn1, David A Larsen1,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Indoor residual spraying (IRS) is a key tool in the fight to control, eliminate and ultimately eradicate malaria. IRS protection is based on a communal effect such that an individual's protection primarily relies on the community-level coverage of IRS with limited protection being provided by household-level coverage. To ensure a communal effect is achieved through IRS, achieving high and uniform community-level coverage should be the ultimate priority of an IRS campaign. Ensuring high community-level coverage of IRS in malaria-endemic areas is challenging given the lack of information available about both the location and number of households needing IRS in any given area. A process termed 'mSpray' has been developed and implemented and involves use of satellite imagery for enumeration for planning IRS and a mobile application to guide IRS implementation. This study assessed (1) the accuracy of the satellite enumeration and (2) how various degrees of spatial aid provided through the mSpray process affected community-level IRS coverage during the 2015 spray campaign in Zambia.Entities:
Keywords: Electronic data capture; Indoor residual spraying; Malaria; Spatial coverage; Spray effectiveness; Zambia; mSpray
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29471832 PMCID: PMC5824454 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2236-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1mSpray consists of enumeration of all structures from satellite maps, selection of households for IRS using a targeting methodology and finally spatial data collection with near real-time reporting/feedback. The figure shows from left to right, Enumerate—computer-based satellite enumeration, target—a map of enumerated structures (red dots) and target areas (green), implement—a tablet-based map to guide users to targeted structures where spatial data is collected, reported to a server and then visualised on intuitive interactive dashboards
Three sample domains
| District | Satellite enumeration date | Paper-based mapsa | mSpray field implementationb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nchelengea, b | 2014 | Yes | Yes |
| Samfyaa | 2014 | Yes | No |
| Kasama | 2015 | No | No |
Spatial aid indicated by a representing use of paper-based maps during implementation or by b representing mSpray field implementation
Fig. 2Map of the three study sites
Fig. 3Difference in number of structures identified by satellite enumeration or on the ground in sampled target areas
IRS coverage across sampled districts
| District | IRS coverage as measured by interview (95% confidence interval), n = 2679 households; 87 transects | IRS coverage as measured by card (95% confidence interval), n = 2679; 87 target areas |
|---|---|---|
| Kasama | 54.5% (44.9–64.1%) | 36.0% (26.7–45.2%) |
| Nchelengea, b | 68.6% (62.9–74.2%) | 66.1% (58.9–73.2%) |
| Samfyaa | 64.9% (55.7–74.0%) | 64.6% (55.8–73.4%) |
Kasama, Nchelenge and Samfya all received different levels of spatial aid during IRS implementation (see Table 1). Spatial aid indicated by a representing use of paper-based maps during implementation or by b representing mSpray field implementation
Factors associated with household being sprayed as verbally reported during interview
| Covariate | Factor | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | P value | Adjusted OR (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| District | Kasama | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Nchelengea, b | 1.820 (1.140–2.906) | 0.013 | 1.755 (1.072–2.873) | 0.026 | |
| Samfyaa | 1.539 (0.882–2.688) | 0.128 | 1.479 (0.847–2.581) | 0.166 | |
| Size of structure | Average | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Larger than average | 0.758 (0.533–1.077) | 0.121 | 0.991 (0.686–1.432) | 0.962 | |
| Smaller than average | 0.692 (0.468–1.024) | 0.065 | 0.723 (0.493–1.060) | 0.096 | |
| Type of roof | Thatch | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Corrugated metal | 0.690 (0.495–0.962) | 0.029 | 0.993 (0.658–1.498) | 0.972 | |
| Type of wall | Rough | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Smooth | 0.657 (0.439–0.983) | 0.041 | 0.693 (0.431–1.116) | 0.130 |
Kasama, Nchelenge and Samfya all received different levels of spatial aid during IRS implementation, with Kasama having enumeration only; Samfya having paper-based maps developed from satellite imagery; and Nchelenge having the same type of paper-based maps as Samfya with the addition of in-field usage of the mSpray mobile application during spray implementation. Spatial aid indicated by a representing use of paper-based maps during implementation or by b representing mSpray field implementation
N = 2679 structures; 87 transects