Human mobility and malaria risk in the Naya river basin of Colombia
Elías Sevilla-Casas
Social Science & Medicine, 1993, vol. 37, issue 9, 1155-1167
Abstract:
This paper develops and tests a methodology for examining the manner and the extent to which human mobility can be associated with malaria risk within an endemic area. The paper presents entomological, epidemiological and mobility results obtained from macro data and micro data. Results indicate that malaria is concentrated in the delta zone of the Naya river basin where the circulation of people into this zone for economic reasons occurs at a time when vector densities are high. High human density combined with high vector density ensures continuous and intense transmission of malaria. In attempting to measure intensity of transmission, microscopic analysis of parasitaemia was found to underestimate prevalence showing it to be very low or negligible, whereas serological data collected during the same period of time reveal that prevalence is high, and similar for both sexes. Serological data also indicate that prevalence increases with age particularly from adolescence onwards. Since mobility for agricultural purposes involves able-bodied males and females, there seems ample justification for concluding that human mobility into certain areas increases the risk of infection for adults, particularly when such mobility coincides with peak rainfall and vector densities. Micro-level data are critical in pinpointing causation and small area variations in risk. Thus the beach area is a high risk area within the delta region, particularly for adults, and this is likely to be because of high vector biting rates in the beach environment. One conclusion is that micro analysis of behaviour, when linked to epidemiological data are particularly useful in defining and locating areas and groups at highest risk; using such information to achieve intensive coverage on a small scale may be more cost-effective than attempting to achieve vector or chemotherapeutic control over a wider area for all groups.
Keywords: malaria; Colombia; mobility; risk; women (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1993
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:socmed:v:37:y:1993:i:9:p:1155-1167
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