Malaria infection and its association with socio-demographics, long lasting insecticide nets usage and hematological parameters among adolescent patients in rural Southwestern Nigeria

Author:

IBRAHIM Azeez OyemomiORCID,Agbesanwa Tosin Anthony,AREMU Shuaib KayodeORCID,BELLO Ibrahim Sebutu,ELEGBEDE Olayide Toyin,GABRIEL-ALAYODE Olusegun Emmanuel,AJETUNMOBI Oluwaserimi Adewumi,ADEWOYE Kayode Rasaq,OLANREWAJU Temitope Moronkeji,ARIYIBI Ebenezer Kayode,OMONIJO Adetunji,SANNI Taofeek Adedayo,ALABI Ayodele Kamal,OLUSUYI Kolawole

Abstract

Background There is increasing evidence suggesting that adolescents are contributing to the populations at risk of malaria. This study determined the prevalence of malaria infection among the adolescents and examined the associated determinants considering socio-demographic, Long Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) usage, and hematological factors in rural Southwestern Nigeria. Methods A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted between July 2021 and September 2022 among 180 adolescents who were recruited at a tertiary health facility in rural Southwestern Nigeria. Interviewer administered questionnaire sought information on their socio-demographics and usage of LLINs. Venous blood samples were collected and processed for malaria parasite detection, ABO blood grouping, hemoglobin genotype, and packed cell volume. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 20. A p-value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results The prevalence of malaria infection was 71.1% (95% CI: 68.2%-73.8%). Lack of formal education (AOR = 2.094; 95% CI: 1.288–3.403), being a rural residence (AOR = 4.821; 95% CI: 2.805–8.287), not using LLINs (AOR = 1.950; 95% CI: 1.525–2.505), genotype AA (AOR = 3.420; 95% CI: 1.003–11.657), genotype AS (AOR = 3.574; 95%CI: 1.040–12.277), rhesus positive (AOR = 1.815; 95% CI:1.121–2.939), and severe anemia (AOR = 1.533; 95% CI: 1.273–1.846) were significantly associated with malaria infection. Conclusion The study revealed the prevalence of malaria infection among the adolescents in rural Southwestern Nigeria. There may be need to pay greater attention to adolescent populations for malaria intervention and control programs.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference45 articles.

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