Mapping the global prevalence, incidence, and mortality of Plasmodium falciparum, 2000–17: a spatial and temporal modelling study
Infectious Diseases Data Observatory · University of Oxford · +12 more institutions
Abstract
Since 2000, the scale-up of malaria control interventions has substantially reduced morbidity and mortality caused by the disease globally, fuelling bold aims for disease elimination. In tandem with increased availability of geospatially resolved data, malaria control programmes increasingly use high-resolution maps to characterise spatially heterogeneous patterns of disease risk and thus efficiently target areas of high burden.
We updated and refined the Plasmodium falciparum parasite rate and clinical incidence models for sub-Saharan Africa, which rely on cross-sectional survey data for parasite rate and intervention coverage. For malaria endemic countries outside of sub-Saharan Africa, we produced estimates of parasite rate and incidence by applying an ecological downscaling approach to malaria incidence data acquired via routine surveillance. Mortality estimates were derived by linking incidence to systematically derived vital registration and verbal autopsy data. Informed by high-resolution covariate surfaces, we estimated P falciparum parasite rate, clinical incidence, and mortality at national, subnational, and 5 × 5 km pixel scales with corresponding uncertainty metrics.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 63.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
42- DJDaniel J. Weiss
Infectious Diseases Data Observatory, University of Oxford
- TLTim Lucas
University of Oxford, Infectious Diseases Data Observatory
- HLHuong Lan Thi Nguyen
Infectious Diseases Data Observatory, University of Oxford
- ANA. Nandi
Infectious Diseases Data Observatory, University of Oxford
- DBDonal Bisanzio
RTI International, University of Nottingham
Topics & keywords
- Malaria
- Plasmodium falciparum
- Incidence (geometry)
- Verbal autopsy
- Mortality rate
- Population
- Demography
- Disease burden
- Good health and well-being