Spatiotemporal, Demographic, and Climatic Drivers of Malaria Transmission in the Endemic Setting of Jazan, Saudi Arabia: A Retrospective Study.

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Ahmad Y Alqassim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background objectives: Despite progress, malaria remains endemic in Jazan, Saudi Arabia necessitating updated epidemiological research to guide elimination strategies. This study analyzed recent surveillance data to elucidate drivers of sustained transmission. A retrospective, epidemiological study was conducted using malaria surveillance data from the Jazan region of Saudi Arabia over a 3-year period from January 2018 to December 2020.

Methods: Deidentified records of all confirmed malaria cases reported across Jazan during the study period were obtained from the Jazan Department of Health infectious disease surveillance system. Additional meteorological data was acquired to assess climatic correlates. The final analysis included 5255 confirmed cases meeting completeness criteria for key variables. Descriptive statistics characterized cases across demographic factors and spatial and temporal distributions. Correlations and linear regression modeling identified associations between monthly cases and weather parameters. Mapping visualized geographic patterns.

Results: Of 5255 confirmed cases, most were concentrated in Baish sector (50.8-72.0% annually), affected adult male foreigners (93.8-97.0%), peaked inconsistently across seasons, and were imported (85.4-94.9%). Non-Saudi nationality had 6-fold higher incidence versus Saudi citizens in 2020 (677.6 vs 23.1 per 100,000). Monthly cases associated negatively with temperature (p=0.015) and positively with windspeed (p=0.005).

Interpretation conclusion: Malaria persistence in Jazan involves geographic and demographic hotspots driven by imported infections and climate effects on vectors. Tailored programming aligned with evolving local dynamics will be essential to sustain elimination gains. Surveillance, optimized interventions, and flexible adaptation to high-risk locations/populations and meteorological influences are key priorities.

沙特阿拉伯贾赞疟疾流行地区疟疾传播的时空、人口和气候驱动因素:一项回顾性研究。
背景目标:尽管取得了进展,但疟疾仍在沙特阿拉伯的贾赞流行,因此有必要进行最新的流行病学研究,以指导消除疟疾的策略。本研究分析了最近的监测数据,以阐明持续传播的驱动因素。从 2018 年 1 月至 2020 年 12 月的 3 年间,我们利用沙特阿拉伯贾赞地区的疟疾监测数据开展了一项回顾性流行病学研究:从贾赞卫生部传染病监测系统中获取了研究期间贾赞地区报告的所有疟疾确诊病例的去身份记录。此外,还获取了其他气象数据以评估气候相关性。最终分析包括符合关键变量完整性标准的 5255 例确诊病例。描述性统计分析了不同人口因素和时空分布的病例特征。相关性和线性回归模型确定了每月病例与天气参数之间的关联。制图直观显示了地理模式:在 5255 例确诊病例中,大多数病例集中在拜什区(每年 50.8-72.0%),受影响的成年男性为外籍人士(93.8-97.0%),不同季节的发病高峰不一致,且为输入性病例(85.4-94.9%)。2020 年,非沙特籍患者的发病率是沙特公民的 6 倍(每 10 万人中有 677.6 例与 23.1 例)。月发病率与气温呈负相关(p=0.015),与风速呈正相关(p=0.005):贾赞的疟疾持续存在涉及地理和人口热点,由外来感染和气候对病媒的影响驱动。要保持消灭疟疾的成果,就必须根据当地不断变化的动态制定有针对性的计划。监测、优化干预措施以及灵活适应高风险地点/人群和气象影响是关键的优先事项。
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来源期刊
Journal of Vector Borne Diseases
Journal of Vector Borne Diseases INFECTIOUS DISEASES-PARASITOLOGY
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
89
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: National Institute of Malaria Research on behalf of Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) publishes the Journal of Vector Borne Diseases. This Journal was earlier published as the Indian Journal of Malariology, a peer reviewed and open access biomedical journal in the field of vector borne diseases. The Journal publishes review articles, original research articles, short research communications, case reports of prime importance, letters to the editor in the field of vector borne diseases and their control.
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