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      An initial examination of the epidemiology of malaria in the state of Roraima, in the Brazilian Amazon basin.

      Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo
      Analysis of Variance, Audiovisual Aids, Brazil, epidemiology, Chi-Square Distribution, Humans, Malaria, Falciparum, parasitology, Malaria, Vivax, Population Growth, Risk Factors, Seasons

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          Abstract

          This study firstly describes the epidemiology of malaria in Roraima, Amazon Basin in Brazil, in the years from 1991 to 1993: the predominance of plasmodium species, distribution of the blood slides examined, the malaria risk and seasonality; and secondly investigates whether population growth from 1962 to 1993 was associated with increasing risk of malaria. Frequency of malaria varied significantly by municipality. Marginally more malaria cases were reported during the dry season (from October to April), even after controlling for by year and municipality. Vivax was the predominant type in all municipalities but the ratio of plasmodium types varied between municipalities. No direct association between population growth and increasing risk of malaria from 1962 to 1993 was detected. Malaria in Roraima is of the "frontier" epidemiological type with high epidemic potential.

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