Detecting Malaria Hotspots in Haiti, a Low-Transmission Setting

Author:

Dismer Amber M.1,Lemoine Jean Frantz2,Jean Baptiste Mérilien2,Mace Kimberly E.3,Impoinvil Daniel E.3,Vanden Eng Jodi3,Chang Michelle A.3

Affiliation:

1. 1Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Global Health Protection, Atlanta, Georgia;

2. 2Ministry of Public Health and Population, National Malaria Control Program, Port-au-Prince, Haiti;

3. 3Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Parasitic Disease and Malaria, Atlanta, Georgia

Abstract

Abstract.In 2006, Haiti committed to malaria elimination when the transmission was thought to be low, but before robust national parasite prevalence estimates were available. In 2011, the first national population-based survey confirmed the national malaria parasite prevalence was < 1%. In both 2014 and 2015, Haiti reported approximately 17,000 malaria cases identified passively at health facilities. To detect malaria transmission hotspots for targeting interventions, the National Malaria Control Program (NMCP) piloted an enhanced geographic information surveillance system in three departments with relatively high-, medium-, and low-transmission areas. From October 2014–September 2015, NMCP staff abstracted health facility records of confirmed malaria cases from 59 health facilities and geo-located patients’ households. Household locations were aggregated to 1-km2 grid cells to calculate cumulative incidence rates (CIRs) per 1,000 persons. Spatial clustering of CIRs were tested using Getis-Ord Gi* analysis. Space–time permutation models searched for clusters up to 6 km in distance using a 1-month malaria transmission window. Of the 2,462 confirmed cases identified from health facility records, 58% were geo-located. Getis-Ord Gi* analysis identified 43 1-km2 hotspots in coastal and inland areas that overlapped primarily with 13 space–time clusters (size: 0.26–2.97 km). This pilot describes the feasibility of detecting malaria hotspots in resource-poor settings. More data from multiple years and serological household surveys are needed to assess completeness and hotspot stability. The NMCP can use these pilot methods and results to target foci investigations and malaria interventions more accurately.

Publisher

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

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