| Literature DB >> 31551076 |
Liana R Andronescu1, Andrea G Buchwald1,2, Jenna E Coalson3, Lauren Cohee1, Andy Bauleni4, Jenny A Walldorf1,5, Chifundo Kandangwe4, Themba Mzilahowa4, Terrie E Taylor6, Don P Mathanga4, Miriam K Laufer7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Distribution campaigns for insecticide-treated nets (ITN) have increased the use of ITNs in Malawi, but malaria prevalence remains high even among those using the nets. Previous studies have addressed ITN ownership, insecticide resistance, and frequency of ITN use as possible contributing factors to the high prevalence of malaria infection despite high ITN coverage, but have rarely considered whether the condition of the ITN, or how many people use it, impacts efficacy. This study assessed how ITN integrity, ITN age, and the number of persons sharing a net might mitigate or reduce protective efficacy among self-identified ITN users in Malawi.Entities:
Keywords: Efficacy; ITN; Malaria control; Malawi
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31551076 PMCID: PMC6760057 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-019-2930-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Descriptive characteristics of ITN users in six cross-sectional surveys, Malawi 2012–2014
| Characteristic | ITN users with test results (N = 9646) |
|---|---|
| Positive | 1460 (15) |
| Negative | 8186 (85) |
| | 0 (0) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 3582 (37) |
| Female | 6041 (63) |
| | 23 (0) |
| Age | |
| 0–5 years | 2128 (22) |
| 5–15 years | 2777 (29) |
| > 15 years | 4709 (49) |
|
| 32 (0) |
| ITN age | |
| 0–2 years | 6558 (68) |
| 2+ years | 3088 (32) |
| ITN integrity | |
| Good | 4300 (45) |
| Fair | 2522 (26) |
| Poor | 1723 (18) |
| Very poor | 1101 (11) |
| Persons sharing an ITN | |
| 1 or 2 | 4293 (45) |
| 3 | 3788 (39) |
| 4+ | 1565 (16) |
| Eaves | |
| Open | 2379 (25) |
| Closed | 7264 (75) |
| | 3 (0) |
| Community infection prevalence | |
| < 6% | 1888 (20) |
| 6–9% | 4632 (48) |
| > 9% | 3126 (32) |
Unadjusted associations between potential predictors, covariates, and P. falciparum infection using a generalized linear mixed model
| Number with | Crude OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| ITN integrity | ||
| Good/fair | 1032 (15) | REFa |
| Poor/bad | 428 (15) | 1.00 (0.89, 1.13) |
| ITN age | ||
| 0–2 years | 1009 (15) | REF |
| 2+ years | 451 (15) | 0.94 (0.83, 1.06) |
| Persons sharing an ITN | ||
| 1 or 2 | 559 (13) | REF |
| 3 | 609 (16) | 1.14 (0.94, 1.38) |
| 4+ | 292 (19) | 1.36 (1.10, 1.69) |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 597 (17) | REF |
| Female | 862 (14) | 0.85 (0.77, 0.94) |
| Age | ||
| 0–5 years | 252 (12) | REF |
| 5–15 years | 621 (22) | 2.14 (1.83, 2.51) |
| > 15 years | 581 (12) | 1.05 (0.90, 1.23) |
| Eaves | ||
| Open | 538 (23) | REF |
| Closed | 922 (13) | 0.42 (0.35, 0.50) |
| Community infection prevalence | ||
| < 6% | 64 (3) | REF |
| 6–9% | 398 (9) | 2.68 (2.05, 3.51) |
| > 9% | 998 (32) | 13.37 (10.30, 17.34) |
aREF is the reference odds ratio of 1.00
Final model of predictors of P. falciparum infection, stratified by participant age using a generalized linear mixed model
| 6 months–5 years | 5+ years | |
|---|---|---|
| aOR (95% CI)a | aOR (95% CI) | |
| ITN integrity | ||
| Good/fair | REF | REF |
| Poor/bad | 1.10 (0.78, 1.55) | 1.06 (0.90, 1.25) |
| ITN age | ||
| < 2 years | REF | REF |
| 2+ years | 1.50 (1.07, 2.08) | 0.80 (0.68, 0.92) |
| Number sharing the net | ||
| 1 or 2 | REF | REF |
| 3 | 1.25 (0.83, 1.89) | 1.22 (1.06, 1.41) |
| 4+ | 1.25 (0.80, 1.95) | 1.10 (0.91, 1.33) |
Adjusted for sex, community infection prevalence, and eaves. Model adjusted for clustering at the community level
aAdjusted odds ratio