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Developing evidence-based strategic plans for malaria control and elimination in Indonesia

Controlling and eliminating malaria in Indonesia is a challenging endeavour. Evidence-based strategic plans should be critically formulated to overcome a complex mosaic of infection risk across the 5000-km-long archipelago of thousand islands and distinctive habitats. This project aimed to thoroughly explore the challenges and opportunities for controlling/eliminating malaria and present the application of malaria cartographic tools to allow malaria control agencies and their partners to comprehensively assess the prospects for reaching pre-elimination, monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of future strategies against the baseline generated. First, the historical context of malaria in Indonesia and important methods of control and their impact in the context of the political systems that supported them was comprehensively described. A series of distribution maps of twenty Anopheles malaria vector mosquitoes in Indonesia were also produced, supported by comprehensive reviews of each species’ bionomics and susceptibility to insecticides. Then, the application of malaria cartographic tools for malaria control/elimination in Indonesia was explored. The first high spatial resolution (1 x 1 km) baseline endemicity maps of Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax malaria were generated, together with corresponding estimates of population at risk and clinical burdens of each species in 2010. Low malaria prevalences of these parasites were predicted in western areas, with high prevalences in eastern Indonesia. Over 132 million people in Indonesia lived at risk of P. falciparum transmission with 70% of them in areas of unstable transmission and 30% in stable transmission. There were an estimated 7.7 million P. falciparum clinical cases across the populations at risk. Meanwhile, nearly 130 million people lived at risk of P. vivax malaria with 79% living in unstable and 21% in stable transmission areas. This infection caused 1.5 million estimated clinical cases in 2010. Both estimates were 30-fold and 6-fold higher than routinely reported numbers, respectively. Finally, this project revealed the substantial multi-faced problems that impede current efforts towards the pre-elimination agenda. High rates of undiagnosed clinical cases, insufficient competence of malaria microscopy, inadequate primaquine dosing against P. vivax malaria infections, insufficient evidence of vector control interventions, wide diversities of vector mosquitoes and their bionomics, mosquito resistance against insecticides and inadequate malaria surveillance systems are challenging the task of controlling and eliminating malaria. A diverse range of strategies enabling locally-specific approaches must be implemented for controlling and eliminating malaria in Indonesia. Strategic recommendations are listed and future research priorities are proposed for further study.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:604390
Date January 2013
CreatorsElyazar, Iqbal Ridzi Fahdri
ContributorsHay, Simon Iain
PublisherUniversity of Oxford
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d7c7ee67-4db0-47d0-b704-3fc5291605b4

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