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Ecologists can enable communities to implement malaria vector control in Africa
Authors:W Richard Mukabana  Khadija Kannady  G Michael Kiama  Jasper N Ijumba  Evan M Mathenge  Ibrahim Kiche  Gamba Nkwengulila  Leonard Mboera  Deo Mtasiwa  Yoichi Yamagata  Ingeborg van Schayk  Bart GJ Knols  Steven W Lindsay  Marcia Caldas de Castro  Hassan Mshinda  Marcel Tanner  Ulrike Fillinger  Gerry F Killeen
Affiliation:1. Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), P.O Box 230, Kilifi, Kenya
2. Health Economics Unit, University of Cape Town, Observatory 7925, Cape Town, South Africa
3. Centre for Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford, 0X3 9DU, Oxford, UK
Abstract:

Background

Malaria imposes significant costs on households and the poor are disproportionately affected. However, cost data are often from quantitative surveys with a fixed recall period. They do not capture costs that unfold slowly over time, or seasonal variations. Few studies investigate the different pathways through which malaria contributes towards poverty. In this paper, a framework indicating the complex links between malaria, poverty and vulnerability at the household level is developed and applied using data from rural Kenya.

Methods

Cross-sectional surveys in a wet and dry season provide data on treatment-seeking, cost-burdens and coping strategies (n = 294 and n = 285 households respectively). 15 case study households purposively selected from the survey and followed for one year provide in-depth qualitative information on the links between malaria, vulnerability and poverty.

Results

Mean direct cost burdens were 7.1% and 5.9% of total household expenditure in the wet and dry seasons respectively. Case study data revealed no clear relationship between cost burdens and vulnerability status at the end of the year. Most important was household vulnerability status at the outset. Households reporting major malaria episodes and other shocks prior to the study descended further into poverty over the year. Wealthier households were better able to cope.

Conclusion

The impacts of malaria on household economic status unfold slowly over time. Coping strategies adopted can have negative implications, influencing household ability to withstand malaria and other contingencies in future. To protect the poor and vulnerable, malaria control policies need to be integrated into development and poverty reduction programmes.
Keywords:
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