Maru W Aregawi, Catherine Maiteki, John C Rek, Bosco Agaba, Charles Katureebe, Mansour Ranjbar, Chunzhe Zhang, Samson Kiware, Jimmy Opigo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: In Uganda, malaria is a year-round health threat, with transmission intensity varying across regions. Despite ongoing intensified interventions, an unprecedented malaria resurgence in early 2022 affected several districts, prompting a swift response from the National Malaria Control Division (NMCD). This study aims to assess the scale and underlying causes of the epidemics, quantify the excess cases and deaths, and propose targeted prevention and response strategies.
Methods: District Health Information System (DHIS2) data from 2017 to 2022 were analysed. A 75th percentile threshold from 2017 to 2021 was used to define true malaria epidemics and compare them to the suspected 2022 epidemic. Excess cases, admissions, and deaths were quantified using area under the curve (AUC) calculations. The level of epidemics was compared across districts with Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS) and Integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) interventions. Precipitation data from multiple sources were used to evaluate rainfall patterns and their impact on malaria epidemics.
Results: Malaria cases were lowest in 2018 but rose by 31% in 2022 compared to the 2017-2021 3rd quartile. Sixty-four of 146 districts experienced epidemics, with 4 facing persistent epidemics year-round. The 2022 epidemic accounted for 3,379,309 (95% CI 1,553,714, 5,339,709) total excess outpatient malaria cases (confirmed and presumed), 3,018,920 (95% CI 1,321,951, 4,661,201) excess confirmed cases, 149,789 (95% CI 66,029, 235,743) excess inpatient cases. Paradoxically, more epidemics occurred in IRS and iCCM districts. Precipitation patterns were consistent across years and were insignificantly correlated with the 2022 epidemic. Provinces with bimodal rainfall patterns were more prone to epidemics, while unimodal regions had fewer epidemics but higher incidence rates. Rainfall lagged by two months (Lag 2) significantly increased malaria incidence (p < 0.01), with each millimetre of rainfall two months prior associated with 13.4 additional malaria cases.
Conclusion: The 2022 malaria epidemic affected 64 districts, with over 3.3 million excess cases and nearly 150,000 excess admissions. Gaps in IRS, iCCM, and intervention coverage, along with minimal rainfall correlation and high vulnerability in bimodal regions, highlight the need for better surveillance, sustainable funding, and tailored responses. While climate was not the main driver, programmatic deficiencies, vector composition shift, reduced efficacy of insecticides, coverage and effectiveness of the interventions likely fueled the epidemic. Strengthening epidemic preparedness, response, and investment will be crucial to preventing future outbreaks and achieving long-term malaria control in Uganda.
背景:在乌干达,疟疾是全年的健康威胁,不同地区的传播强度各不相同。尽管持续加强了干预措施,但2022年初出现的前所未有的疟疾死灰复燃影响了几个地区,促使国家疟疾控制司迅速作出反应。本研究旨在评估流行病的规模和根本原因,量化超额病例和死亡人数,并提出有针对性的预防和应对策略。方法:对2017 - 2022年地区卫生信息系统(DHIS2)数据进行分析。使用2017年至2021年的第75个百分位数阈值来定义真正的疟疾流行,并将其与2022年的疑似流行进行比较。使用曲线下面积(AUC)计算对多余病例、入院和死亡进行量化。采用室内残留喷洒(IRS)和综合社区病例管理(iCCM)干预措施比较了不同地区的流行水平。来自多个来源的降水数据被用于评估降雨模式及其对疟疾流行的影响。结果:2018年疟疾病例最低,但与2017-2021年第三四分位数相比,2022年上升了31%。146个县中有64个县发生了流行病,其中4个县全年持续流行。2022年的流行病占门诊疟疾(确诊和推定)总超额病例3,379,309例(95% CI 1,553,714, 5,339,709),超额确诊病例3,018,920例(95% CI 1,321,951, 4,661,201),超额住院病例149,789例(95% CI 66,029, 235,743)。矛盾的是,更多的流行病发生在回收站区和传染病控制区。降水模式历年一致,与2022年疫情相关性不显著。具有双峰降雨模式的省份更容易发生流行病,而单峰降雨模式的地区流行病较少,但发病率较高。降雨滞后两个月(滞后2)显著增加疟疾发病率(p)结论:2022年疟疾流行影响了64个地区,超额病例超过330万,超额入院人数近15万。IRS、iCCM和干预覆盖方面的差距,以及降雨量相关性最小和双峰地区脆弱性高的问题,凸显了加强监测、可持续供资和量身定制应对措施的必要性。虽然气候不是主要驱动因素,但方案缺陷、病媒组成变化、杀虫剂效力降低、干预措施的覆盖范围和有效性可能助长了这一流行病。加强流行病防范、应对和投资对于预防今后的疫情暴发和在乌干达实现长期疟疾控制至关重要。
期刊介绍:
Malaria Journal is aimed at the scientific community interested in malaria in its broadest sense. It is the only journal that publishes exclusively articles on malaria and, as such, it aims to bring together knowledge from the different specialities involved in this very broad discipline, from the bench to the bedside and to the field.