Malaria transmission in Africa: Its relationship with yellow fever and measles

Author:

Okunlola Oluyemi A.ORCID,Oyeyemi Oyetunde T.ORCID

Abstract

Background Malaria has been strongly linked to the transmission and pathophysiology of some viral diseases. Malaria and vaccine-preventable diseases often co-exist in endemic countries but the implication of their co-existence on their transmission dynamics and control is poorly understood. The study aims to evaluate the relationships between the incidence of malaria and cases of measles and yellow fever in Africa. Methods The malaria incidence, death due to malaria, measles and yellow fever data were sourced from the WHO database. Poisson and zero-inflated time-trend regression were used to model the relationships between malaria and the two vaccine-preventable diseases. P-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant. Results A significant negative relationship existed between malaria incidence and measles cases (P<0.05), however, malaria showed a positive relationship with yellow fever (P<0.05). The relationships between death due to malaria and measles/yellow fever cases followed similar trends but with a higher level of statistical significance (P<0.001). Conclusions Malaria varied negatively with measles cases but positively with yellow fever. The relationships observed in this study could be important for the management of malaria and the studied vaccine-preventable diseases. Increase vaccination coverage and/or malaria treatment could modulate the direction of these relationships.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference38 articles.

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3. World Health Organization. Compendium of who malaria guidance—prevention, diagnosis, treatment, surveillance and elimination 2019. https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/312082/WHO-CDS-GMP-2019.03-eng.pdf. Accessed 20 March 2022.

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