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The impact of stopping and starting indoor residual spraying on malaria burden in 14 districts of Uganda

Authors :
Jane Frances Namuganga
Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer
Asadu Sserwanga
Catherine Maiteki-Ssebuguzi
Sarah G. Staedke
Jimmy Opigo
Emmanuel Arinaitwe
Moses R. Kamya
Josephat Shililu
Samuel Gonahasa
Moses Kiggundu
Joaniter I. Nankabirwa
Kassahun Belay
Arthur Mpimbaza
James Kapisi
Damian Rutazaana
Chris Ebong
Grant Dorsey
Adrienne Epstein
Michael Okia
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

The scale-up of malaria control efforts has led to marked reductions in malaria burden over the past twenty years, but progress has slowed. Implementation of indoor residual spraying (IRS) of insecticide, a proven vector control intervention, has been limited and difficult to sustain partly because questions remain on its added impact over widely accepted interventions such as bed nets. Using data from 14 enhanced surveillance health facilities in Uganda, a country with high bet net coverage yet high malaria burden, we estimate the impact of starting and stopping IRS. We show that stopping IRS resulted in a 5-fold increase in malaria incidence within 10 months, but reinstating IRS led to an over 5-fold decrease within 8 months. In areas where IRS was initiated and sustained, malaria incidence dropped by 85% after year 4. IRS could play a critical role in achieving global malaria targets, particularly in areas where progress has stalled.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5212dd216a6a1064254c769c7d66226a