Epidemiology, Surveillance, and Control of Frontier Malaria
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Infectious Diseases, Chronic Diseases, and Disease Prevention".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 28 February 2025 | Viewed by 14556
Special Issue Editors
Interests: malaria; Plasmodium vivax; diagnostics and treatment, relapse/recrudescence; transmission dynamics; vector–parasite interactions; serology; immunity; genetics; genomics
Interests: vector control; insecticide resistance; insecticide metabolism; insecticide resistance techniques; insecticide resistance management
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Malaria remains a major public health problem, mainly in tropical and subtropical areas. Overall, the progress made in reducing the burden of malaria around the world is undeniable, and research stands out as a pillar for malaria control and elimination. However, the World Health Organization estimated an increase from 245 million malaria cases in 2020 to 247 in 2021. More than 600,000 people still die from malaria every year—most of them children (World Malaria Report 2022 [1]). The increase observed was linked to disruptions in the provision of malaria prevention, diagnosis, and treatment during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, which illustrates the urgent situation. The cost of malaria control strategies, drugs, diagnosis, insecticides, and vaccines against evolving parasites and vectors is enormous. Most of the countries where transmission persists are of low income and neglected to some degree. Malaria parasites are introduced and move between villages, municipalities, country borders, and continents mainly due to human mobility. At present, human migration from affected areas is variable and to some extent depends on socioeconomic, cultural, and political factors, among others.
Detecting a malaria patient can be difficult in areas with low parasitemia; high frequency of semi-immune individuals; a lack of diagnostic tests, medicine, or highly skilled personnel; parasite strains; treatment efficacy; and vector species susceptible to malarial parasites, among others. In the last decade, resistance to commonly used insecticides and antimalarial drugs has been emerging in various areas; Therefore, monitoring both resistance trends at different geographical levels is crucial. Genetic and genomic studies are indispensable in detecting selective pressure in drug-resistance genes and antigenic molecules in order to develop parasite surveillance strategies and evaluate control measures, insecticide resistance mechanisms, etc. It is essential to integrate the engagement and evaluation of community participation into artificial intelligence and molecular surveillance.
We will accept manuscripts from different disciplines of human malaria, such as the topics cited above. This Special Issue welcomes studies in rural and urban areas, at the community, municipality, or country level. It is important to approach the study of frontier malaria given by political, ethnic, and geographical divisions, malaria introduction, and surveillance, among other related topics. This is highly relevant especially because population movement has greatly increased in recent years. Listed are some examples of topics that could be addressed in this Special Issue:
- Malaria diagnosis and treatment in communities with unstable malaria.
- Evaluation of malaria treatment in areas with several endemic malaria species.
- Genetics or genomics studies to solve issues of frontier malaria.
- Vector susceptibility and resistance to insecticides.
- Vector susceptibility to malaria species, and transmission dynamics.
- Monitoring drug resistance.
- Artificial intelligence in malaria control, elimination, and surveillance.
- Studies on protective immunity and vaccines.
- Analysis of compiled malaria records and recommendations.
- Management of resistance to insecticides.
Please note that clinical studies not sufficiently addressing the aim of the journal will not be considered.
Reference
[1] World Malaria Report 2022. Available online: https://www.who.int/teams/global-malaria-programme/reports/world-malaria-report-2022 (accessed on 10 October 2023).
Dr. Lilia González-Cerón
Dr. Patricia Penilla-Navarro
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- malaria
- epidemiology
- entomology
- diagnosis and treatment
- transmission dynamics
- drug resistance
- vector control
- insecticide resistance
- insecticide resistance comparative techniques
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