Geo-Epidemiology of Malaria
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Infectious Disease Epidemiology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 November 2020) | Viewed by 72896
Special Issue Editors
Interests: biostatistics; epidemics; biomathematics; environmental public health
Interests: reproductive function
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Scaling up of malaria control strategies achieved a remarkable reduction in the burden of malaria worldwide over the period from 2000 to 2015. However, the WHO 2018 report stated that “no significant progress in reducing global malaria cases was made” during the 2015–2017 period, with an observed increase of +20 million cases between 2016 and 2017. Unexpected meteorological events and significant sociodemographic, economic, environmental, and entomologic changes have been observed in different regions over the last decade. It is crucial to understand how these changes affect malaria epidemiology in the remaining active foci. Without major gains in the understanding of geo-epidemiology of malaria, control strategies will remain ineffective, and elimination itself may remain out of reach beyond the 2030 objective stated by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG).
Malaria geo-epidemiology can be defined as studying the spatial and temporal profiles of malaria and of the determinants of its persistence and increase, in an ecohealth systemic perspective. This Special Issue seeks papers on malaria geo-epidemiology, which includes geographical studies (at local and/or regional scales), social and economic determinants (including KABP studies), environmental and meteorological factors, parasite diversity, vector diversity and ecology, access to care, spatially driven strategies (e.g., focused screening and/or treatment), population mobility, parasite carriage, local and/or distant transmission, transmission dynamics (including epidemiological models), clinical and intervention trials and prevention, epidemiological surveillance systems, etc. We also welcome high-quality systematic reviews related to these matters. All submitted papers should be presented in a geo-epidemiological approach.
I would be very happy if this Special Issue serves as an identifying set of contextual factors and bottlenecks to locally tailor control strategies against malaria transmission intensity and dynamics. Understanding the complex epidemiological situation will allow reach malaria’s last bastion, or rather, epidemic front line.
Prof. Jean Gaudart
Prof. Riana Bornman
Dr. Issaka Sagara
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Geo-epidemiology
- Malaria
- Ecohealth
- Spatial and temporal statistics
- Environment and meteorology
- Social and health Economy
- Clinical and interventional trials
- Prevention
- Entomology
- Surveillance system
- Epidemiological models
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