4.7 Article

Climate change and the dynamics of age-related malaria incidence in Southern Africa

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 197, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111017

Keywords

Climate change; Temperature; Malaria interventions; Age; Bayesian models; Zambia

Funding

  1. Emerging Pathogens Institute at the University of Florida
  2. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as part of the University of Florida Pre-eminence Initiative
  3. UK Commonwealth Scholarship

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In malaria-endemic countries like Zambia, significant reductions in malaria incidence among children <5 years old have been achieved, but challenges remain in older age groups. Climate factors have a greater impact on individuals aged >5 years, influencing malaria more than interventions such as mosquito nets and indoor residual spraying. Improved communication and education interventions targeting the >5 age group are urgently needed to address increasing incidence rates.
In the last decade, many malaria-endemic countries, like Zambia, have achieved significant reductions in malaria incidence among children <5 years old but face ongoing challenges in achieving similar progress against malaria in older age groups. In parts of Zambia, changing climatic and environmental factors are among those suspectedly behind high malaria incidence. Changes and variations in these factors potentially interfere with intervention program effectiveness and alter the distribution and incidence patterns of malaria differentially between young children and the rest of the population. We used parametric and non-parametric statistics to model the effects of climatic and socio-demographic variables on age-specific malaria incidence vis-`a-vis control interventions. Linear regressions, mixed models, and Mann-Kendall tests were implemented to explore trends, changes in trends, and regress malaria incidence against environmental and intervention variables. Our study shows that while climate parameters affect the whole population, their impacts are felt most by people aged >5 years. Climate variables influenced malaria substantially more than mosquito nets and indoor residual spraying interventions. We establish that climate parameters negatively impact malaria control efforts by exacerbating the transmission conditions via more conducive temperature and rainfall environments, which are augmented by cultural and socioeconomic exposure mechanisms. We argue that an intensified communications and education intervention strategy for behavioural change specifically targeted at >5 aged population where incidence rates are increasing, is urgently required and call for further malaria stratification among the >5 age groups in the routine collection, analysis and reporting of malaria mortality and incidence data.

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