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Plasmodium infection,anaemia and mosquito net use among school children across different settings in Kenya
Authors:Caroline W. Gitonga  Tansy Edwards  Peris N. Karanja  Abdisalan M. Noor  Robert W. Snow  Simon J. Brooker
Affiliation:1. Malaria Public Health & Epidemiology Group, Kenya Medical Research Institute‐Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi, Kenya;2. Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK;3. MRC Tropical Epidemiology Group, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK;4. Centre for Tropical Medicine, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford, CCVTM, Oxford, UK
Abstract:Objective To investigate risk factors, including reported net use, for Plasmodium infection and anaemia among school children and to explore variations in effects across different malaria ecologies occurring in Kenya. Methods This study analysed data for 49 975 school children in 480 schools surveyed during a national school malaria survey, 2008–2010. Mixed effects logistic regression was used to investigate factors associated with Plasmodium infection and anaemia within different malaria transmission zones. Results Insecticide‐treated net (ITN) use was associated with reduction in the odds of Plasmodium infection in coastal and western highlands epidemic zones and among boys in the lakeside high transmission zone. Other risk factors for Plasmodium infection and for anaemia also varied by zone. Plasmodium infection was negatively associated with increasing socio‐economic status in all transmission settings, except in the semi‐arid north‐east zone. Plasmodium infection was a risk factor for anaemia in lakeside high transmission, western highlands epidemic and central low‐risk zones, whereas ITN use was only associated with lower levels of anaemia in coastal and central zones and among boys in the lakeside high transmission zone. Conclusions The risk factors for Plasmodium infection and anaemia, including the protective associations with ITN use, vary according to malaria transmission settings in Kenya, and future efforts to control malaria and anaemia should take into account such heterogeneities among school children.
Keywords:Plasmodium  malaria  anaemia  insecticide‐treated nets  risk factors  school children  Kenya  Plasmodium  paludisme  malaria  ané  mie  moustiquaires impré  gné  es d’  insecticide  facteurs de risque  é  coliers  Kenya  Plasmodium  malaria  anemia  mosquiteras impregnadas con insecticida  factores de riesgo  niñ  os escolares  Kenia
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