Malaria Stratification Mapping in Thailand to Support Prevention of Reestablishment

Author:

Bisanzio Donal1,Sudathip Prayuth2,Kitchakarn Suravadee2,Kanjanasuwan Jerdsuda2,Gopinath Deyer3,Pinyajeerapat Niparueradee4,Sintasath David4,Shah Jui A.1

Affiliation:

1. Inform Asia: USAID’s Health Research Program, RTI International, Bangkok, Thailand;

2. Division of Vector Borne Diseases, Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health, Nonthaburi, Thailand;

3. World Health Organization, Nonthaburi, Thailand;

4. U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative, United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Regional Development Mission for Asia, Bangkok, Thailand

Abstract

ABSTRACT. Thailand aims to eliminate malaria by 2026, with 46 of the country’s 77 provinces already verified as malaria free. However, these provinces remain susceptible to the reestablishment of indigenous transmission that would threaten the national goal. Thus, the country is prioritizing national and subnational prevention of reestablishment (POR) planning while considering the spatial heterogeneity of the remaining malaria caseload. To support POR efforts, a novel nonmodeling method produced a malaria stratification map at the tambon (subdistrict) level, incorporating malaria case data, demographic data, and environmental factors. The stratification analysis categorized 7,425 tambons into the following four risk strata: Local Transmission (2.9%), At Risk for Transmission (3.1%), High Risk for Reintroduction (2.9%), and Low Risk for Reintroduction (91.1%). The stratification map will support the national program to target malaria interventions in remaining hotspots and mitigate the risk of transmission in malaria-free areas.

Publisher

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

Reference20 articles.

1. Guideline of Malaria Control Practice for Public Health Worker,2009

2. Guide to Malaria Elimination for Thailand’s Local Administrative Organizations and the Health Network,2019

3. Assessing Thailand’s 1-3-7 surveillance strategy in accelerating malaria elimination;Sudathip,2022

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