Malaria control in Papua New Guinea results in complex epidemiological changes

Date

2006

Authors

Mueller, Ivo
Tulloch, Jim
Marfurt, Jutta
Hide, Robin
Reeder, John C

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Medical Society of Papua New Guinea

Abstract

With a renewed interest in large-scale malaria interventions, knowledge about the possible long-term effects of such interventions on the nature of malaria transmission is essential. We document complex changes in malaria epidemiology over the last 40 years associated with changing malaria control activities in Karimui, an isolated area in Papua New Guinea. An initially equal distribution of Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax and P. malariae changed to currently 68% P. falciparum, after passing through a phase of transitory P. vivax dominance, when control started to fail. Initial drops in malaria prevalence proved difficult to sustain and present post-control levels are significantly higher than pre-control levels. The example of Karimui indicates that unsustained control can lead to changes in malaria patterns that may leave a population worse off.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: animal; article; disease transmission; human; infection control; malaria; methodology; Papua New Guinea; pathology; Plasmodium falciparum; Plasmodium malariae; Plasmodium vivax; prevalence; spleen; statistics; Animals; Communicable Disease Control; Humans

Citation

Source

Papua New Guinea Medical Journal

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

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