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The global distribution and population at risk of malaria: past, present, and future

The global distribution and population at risk of malaria: past, present, and future
The global distribution and population at risk of malaria: past, present, and future
The aim of this review was to use geographic information systems in combination with historical maps to quantify the anthropogenic impact on the distribution of malaria in the 20th century. The nature of the cartographic record enabled global and regional patterns in the spatial limits of malaria to be investigated at six intervals between 1900 and 2002. Contemporaneous population surfaces also allowed changes in the numbers of people living in areas of malaria risk to be quantified. These data showed that during the past century, despite human activities reducing by half the land area supporting malaria, demographic changes resulted in a 2 billion increase in the total population exposed to malaria risk. Furthermore, stratifying the present day malaria extent by endemicity class and examining regional differences highlighted that nearly 1 billion people are exposed to hypoendemic and mesoendemic malaria in southeast Asia. We further concluded that some distortion in estimates of the regional distribution of malaria burden could have resulted from different methods used to calculate burden in Africa. Crude estimates of the national prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection based on endemicity maps corroborate these assertions. Finally, population projections for 2010 were used to investigate the potential effect of future demographic changes. These indicated that although population growth will not substantially change the regional distribution of people at malaria risk, around 400 million births will occur within the boundary of current distribution of malaria by 2010: the date by which the Roll Back Malaria initiative is challenged to halve the world's malaria burden.
endemic diseases, humans, malaria/*epidemiology/etiology/*prevention & control, population, risk factors, world health
1473-3099
327-336
Hay, S.I.
18d621e0-2813-4c05-b2b7-09df3f24aca7
Guerra, C.A.
112d8194-b5fd-43f0-a836-8617cb4c6fcd
Tatem, A.J.
6c6de104-a5f9-46e0-bb93-a1a7c980513e
Noor, A.M.
241236c3-43df-47b0-bcab-ff7c25318cc6
Snow, R.W.
1df934dd-70f4-4bf1-8a98-7feb0207d796
Hay, S.I.
18d621e0-2813-4c05-b2b7-09df3f24aca7
Guerra, C.A.
112d8194-b5fd-43f0-a836-8617cb4c6fcd
Tatem, A.J.
6c6de104-a5f9-46e0-bb93-a1a7c980513e
Noor, A.M.
241236c3-43df-47b0-bcab-ff7c25318cc6
Snow, R.W.
1df934dd-70f4-4bf1-8a98-7feb0207d796

Hay, S.I., Guerra, C.A., Tatem, A.J., Noor, A.M. and Snow, R.W. (2004) The global distribution and population at risk of malaria: past, present, and future. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 4 (6), 327-336. (doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(04)01043-6). (PMID:15172341)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The aim of this review was to use geographic information systems in combination with historical maps to quantify the anthropogenic impact on the distribution of malaria in the 20th century. The nature of the cartographic record enabled global and regional patterns in the spatial limits of malaria to be investigated at six intervals between 1900 and 2002. Contemporaneous population surfaces also allowed changes in the numbers of people living in areas of malaria risk to be quantified. These data showed that during the past century, despite human activities reducing by half the land area supporting malaria, demographic changes resulted in a 2 billion increase in the total population exposed to malaria risk. Furthermore, stratifying the present day malaria extent by endemicity class and examining regional differences highlighted that nearly 1 billion people are exposed to hypoendemic and mesoendemic malaria in southeast Asia. We further concluded that some distortion in estimates of the regional distribution of malaria burden could have resulted from different methods used to calculate burden in Africa. Crude estimates of the national prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection based on endemicity maps corroborate these assertions. Finally, population projections for 2010 were used to investigate the potential effect of future demographic changes. These indicated that although population growth will not substantially change the regional distribution of people at malaria risk, around 400 million births will occur within the boundary of current distribution of malaria by 2010: the date by which the Roll Back Malaria initiative is challenged to halve the world's malaria burden.

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More information

Published date: June 2004
Keywords: endemic diseases, humans, malaria/*epidemiology/etiology/*prevention & control, population, risk factors, world health
Organisations: Geography & Environment, PHEW – P (Population Health)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 344423
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/344423
ISSN: 1473-3099
PURE UUID: 4ff13315-416a-4a8f-86c2-13f38ebc4742
ORCID for A.J. Tatem: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7270-941X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Feb 2013 12:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: S.I. Hay
Author: C.A. Guerra
Author: A.J. Tatem ORCID iD
Author: A.M. Noor
Author: R.W. Snow

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