Publication: Hitting a moving target: A model for malaria elimination in the presence of population movement
Issued Date
2015-12-01
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19326203
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2-s2.0-84958214075
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
PLoS ONE. Vol.10, No.12 (2015)
Suggested Citation
Sheetal Prakash Silal, Francesca Little, Karen Irma Barnes, Lisa Jane White Hitting a moving target: A model for malaria elimination in the presence of population movement. PLoS ONE. Vol.10, No.12 (2015). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0144990 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/35060
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Title
Hitting a moving target: A model for malaria elimination in the presence of population movement
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Abstract
© 2015 Silal et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. South Africa is committed to eliminating malaria with a goal of zero local transmission by 2018. Malaria elimination strategies may be unsuccessful if they focus only on vector biology, and ignore the mobility patterns of humans, particularly where the majority of infections are imported. In the first study in Mpumalanga Province in South Africa designed for this purpose, a metapopulation model is developed to assess the impact of their proposed elimination-focused policy interventions. A stochastic, non-linear, ordinary-differential equation model is fitted to malaria data from Mpumalanga and neighbouring Maputo Province in Mozambique. Further scaling-up of vector control is predicted to lead to a minimal reduction in local infections, while mass drug administration and focal screening and treatment at the Mpumalanga-Maputo border are predicted to have only a short-lived impact. Source reduction in Maputo Province is predicted to generate large reductions in local infections through stemming imported infections. The mathematical model predicts malaria elimination to be possible only when imported infections are treated before entry or eliminated at the source suggesting that a regionally focused strategy appears needed, for achieving malaria elimination in Mpumalanga and South Africa.
