Improving malaria surveillance in inner city London: is there a need for targeted intervention?

V A Cleary, J I Figueroa, R Heathcock, L Warren
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Abstract

Malaria in south east London is under-notified, and a previous local study has described how available data can underestimate the incidence. An active surveillance system was established and data on malaria cases diagnosed between the 1st January and 31st December 2000 were gathered from local laboratories, the Malaria Reference Laboratory (MRL) and a neighbouring health authority. In total 320 cases were identified in local residents (42.33 per 100,000). Of these 320, 293 were laboratory confirmed (38.75 per 100,000) and there were 47 notifications on clinical suspicion. Only 6.8% (20) laboratory-confirmed cases were formally notified. Males of African descent aged 25-39 years who travelled to West Africa were most affected, and 92.5% of the cases were of P. falciparum infection. The surveillance programme confirmed that formal malaria notifications are unreliable. The most important group of residents for targeted health intervention are members of ethnic minority groups, born in endemic areas and travelling to their countries of origin to visit family or friends.

改善伦敦市中心的疟疾监测:是否需要有针对性的干预?
伦敦东南部的疟疾通报不足,之前的一项当地研究描述了现有数据如何低估了发病率。建立了一个主动监测系统,并从地方实验室、疟疾参考实验室和邻近的卫生当局收集了2000年1月1日至12月31日期间诊断的疟疾病例的数据。当地居民共发现病例320例(42.33 / 10万)。在这320例病例中,实验室确诊293例(每10万人38.75例),临床疑似通报47例。仅有6.8%(20例)实验室确诊病例得到正式通报。前往西非旅行的25-39岁非洲裔男性受影响最大,92.5%的病例为恶性疟原虫感染。监测规划证实,正式的疟疾通报不可靠。有针对性的保健干预的最重要的居民群体是少数民族群体的成员,他们出生在流行地区,并前往原籍国探亲或访友。
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