dc.description.abstract |
A study on the impact of vector control measures
on malaria epidemiology, before and after intervention
measures were applied, 'was conducted in Magomeni in
Dar-es-Salaam between October 1988 and April 1989.
The study involve~ determining the prevalence rate of
malaria by parasite and spleen rates, using children
aged between 2-~ years old living in the study area,
and comparing it with that of a control area.
The main obj ecti ve of the study was to determine the
prevalence of malaria before and after intervention and
the effectiveness of the anti-vector measures of the
malaria control programme in Magomeni.
The study revealed that the prevalence of malaria
in the study area was 20% before intervention and 19.7%
six months after intervention. There was no
statistically significant decrease in malaria
prevalence six months after intervention measures were
instituted.
The spleen rate was not found to have
significantly decreased after intervention. It was
also found that Anopheles larval densities in the
breeding sites in the study area were still high
despite the application of the larvicide, 50% (Ee)
r'e>ni trothion. However, it was observed that there was
a gradual decrease in larval densities over the six
month period in both the study and comparison areas.
iv
Clinical malaria patients who were attending treatment
in the health institutions in the study area before
intervention constituted 18% of all out-patient
attendances but six months later after intervention,
the number decreased to 16%. However, the drop was not
Despite this drop, malaria
highest percentage of out-
statistically significant.
still consti tuted the
patients.
Therefore the study revealed that the malaria
vector control measures that were carried out in the
Magomeni area of Dar-es-Salaam over a period of six
months had no significant impact on the epidemiology of
malaria. The study, therefore, failed to support the
-Null-hypothesis that the prevalence of malaria would
drop• from a higher level of endemicity to the next
lower level after six months of anti-vector operations. |
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