The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination

Abstract Malaria risk and endemicity is often associated with the nature of human habitation and living environment. The disappearance of malaria from regions where it had been endemic for centuries, such as coastal areas of southern England, has been attributed, at least in part, to improvement in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Richard Carter, Nadira D. Karunaweera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-020-03450-y
id doaj-1593d0c5e60f45a0b0077c11b20b3a66
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1593d0c5e60f45a0b0077c11b20b3a662020-11-25T03:58:31ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752020-10-011911610.1186/s12936-020-03450-yThe role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and eliminationRichard Carter0Nadira D. Karunaweera1School of Biological Sciences, University of EdinburghDepartment of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of ColomboAbstract Malaria risk and endemicity is often associated with the nature of human habitation and living environment. The disappearance of malaria from regions where it had been endemic for centuries, such as coastal areas of southern England, has been attributed, at least in part, to improvement in the quality of housing. Moreover, indigenous malaria transmission ceased throughout England without the necessity to eliminate the vector mosquitoes. The principles of malaria transmission, as formulated following the thinking of the pioneers of malaria epidemiology, Ronald Ross and George Macdonald, show how this may happen. Malaria ceases to be sustainable where its reproduction number, R0, the number of new cases generated on average for each existing case of malaria, falls below 1. In the terms of a Ross/Macdonald analysis the reduced contact between humans and blood-feeding mosquitoes that is achieved through housing that is secure against mosquito entry can have a powerful effect in reducing malaria R0. The island of Sri Lanka, where malaria had been endemic probably for centuries previously, has reported no indigenous cases of malaria since 2012. The disappearance of malaria from Sri Lanka followed an effective attack upon malaria transmission by the Sri Lanka Anti Malaria Campaign. The targeted and enhanced efforts of this campaign launched in 1999, drove the malaria R0 below 1 for most of the period up to 2012, leading to a nearly continuous decline in malaria cases until their extinction. The decades leading up to the launch of these efforts were ones of general improvement of living environment and notably in the quality of housing stock. Studies in the late 1980s had shown that quality of housing in a highly malarious district of Sri Lanka was a strong determinant of malaria risk. Through its effects on malaria R0, improved housing is likely to have facilitated the malaria control and cessation of indigenous malaria transmission in Sri Lanka and that it will help reduce the risk of the re-introduction of malaria to the island.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-020-03450-yMalaria transmissionMalaria controlMalaria eliminationHousingRoss/Macdonald equationsReproduction number
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard Carter
Nadira D. Karunaweera
spellingShingle Richard Carter
Nadira D. Karunaweera
The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
Malaria Journal
Malaria transmission
Malaria control
Malaria elimination
Housing
Ross/Macdonald equations
Reproduction number
author_facet Richard Carter
Nadira D. Karunaweera
author_sort Richard Carter
title The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
title_short The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
title_full The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
title_fullStr The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
title_full_unstemmed The role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
title_sort role of improved housing and living environments in malaria control and elimination
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Malaria risk and endemicity is often associated with the nature of human habitation and living environment. The disappearance of malaria from regions where it had been endemic for centuries, such as coastal areas of southern England, has been attributed, at least in part, to improvement in the quality of housing. Moreover, indigenous malaria transmission ceased throughout England without the necessity to eliminate the vector mosquitoes. The principles of malaria transmission, as formulated following the thinking of the pioneers of malaria epidemiology, Ronald Ross and George Macdonald, show how this may happen. Malaria ceases to be sustainable where its reproduction number, R0, the number of new cases generated on average for each existing case of malaria, falls below 1. In the terms of a Ross/Macdonald analysis the reduced contact between humans and blood-feeding mosquitoes that is achieved through housing that is secure against mosquito entry can have a powerful effect in reducing malaria R0. The island of Sri Lanka, where malaria had been endemic probably for centuries previously, has reported no indigenous cases of malaria since 2012. The disappearance of malaria from Sri Lanka followed an effective attack upon malaria transmission by the Sri Lanka Anti Malaria Campaign. The targeted and enhanced efforts of this campaign launched in 1999, drove the malaria R0 below 1 for most of the period up to 2012, leading to a nearly continuous decline in malaria cases until their extinction. The decades leading up to the launch of these efforts were ones of general improvement of living environment and notably in the quality of housing stock. Studies in the late 1980s had shown that quality of housing in a highly malarious district of Sri Lanka was a strong determinant of malaria risk. Through its effects on malaria R0, improved housing is likely to have facilitated the malaria control and cessation of indigenous malaria transmission in Sri Lanka and that it will help reduce the risk of the re-introduction of malaria to the island.
topic Malaria transmission
Malaria control
Malaria elimination
Housing
Ross/Macdonald equations
Reproduction number
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-020-03450-y
work_keys_str_mv AT richardcarter theroleofimprovedhousingandlivingenvironmentsinmalariacontrolandelimination
AT nadiradkarunaweera theroleofimprovedhousingandlivingenvironmentsinmalariacontrolandelimination
AT richardcarter roleofimprovedhousingandlivingenvironmentsinmalariacontrolandelimination
AT nadiradkarunaweera roleofimprovedhousingandlivingenvironmentsinmalariacontrolandelimination
_version_ 1724456812320653312