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      Historical and Epidemiological study of malaria cases of the "Refugee Hospital" in Veria in the context of Anti-Malaria Battle in Greece (1926–1940)

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          This Historical Epidemiological study aims to evaluate malaria in Greek refugees during the 1926–1940 period in the region of Imathia, Central Macedonia, Greece, in the context of the Anti-Malaria Battle in Greece.

          Materials and methods

          The archives of the Refugee Hospital of Veria, Imathia were examined (March 5, 1926 to October 27, 1940); this is a report of previously unpublished primary material comprising 15,921 cases, of whom 8,408 patients were hospitalized due to malaria. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify independent risk factors for hospitalization due to malaria; adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs) were estimated.

          Results

          Residence in lower elevation (adjusted OR = 0.95, 95% CI: 0.92–0.97, per increments of elevation), refugee status (from Bulgaria/Balkans, Caucasus, Constantinople and Thrace, Pontus and inland of Turkey), female gender, and younger age (adjusted OR per 10-year increase = 0.88, 95% CI: 0.86–0.90) correlated independently with hospitalization due to malaria.

          Conclusions

          Malaria was the leading cause of admission to the hospital in the region of Imathia during the studied period. The association with elevation reflects the aggravating role of marshes before the drainage of Lake Giannitsa.

          Abstract

          Refugees; Malaria; Public health; Hospital records; Seasonality; Epidemiology; Infectious disease; Parasitology.

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          Most cited references17

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          Increased Pyrethroid Resistance in Malaria Vectors and Decreased Bed Net Effectiveness, Burkina Faso

          Long-lasting insecticide–treated bed nets (LLINs) have been shown repeatedly to provide protection against malaria transmission in Africa and reduce childhood mortality rates by ≈20% ( 1 ). Distribution of LLINs has increased over the past decade, and an estimated 54% of households at risk for malaria in sub-Saharan Africa have ≥1 LLIN. This factor has been a major contributor in reducing malaria incidence; the estimated malaria mortality rate for Africa has decreased by ≈49% since 2000 ( 2 ). These advances are now threatened by rapid selection and spread of resistance to insecticides in malaria vectors ( 3 ). Resistance to pyrethroids, the only class of insecticides available for use on LLINs, is now widespread in Anopheles gambiae and An. funestus mosquitoes, the major malaria vectors ( 4 ). To standardize monitoring for insecticide resistance, the World Health Organization (WHO) has developed simple bioassays that use filter papers impregnated with insecticide at a predefined diagnostic dose. A population is described as resistant to an insecticide if a mortality rate >90% is observed in these tests ( 5 ). These assays are useful for detecting resistance when it first appears in the population. However, these assays do not provide any information on the strength of this resistance. This information is crucial for assessing the likely effect of this resistance on effectiveness of vector control tools. The Global Plan for Insecticide Resistance Management in Malaria Vectors ( 3 ) recommends that all malaria-endemic countries monitor insecticide resistance in local vectors. However, because the correlation between results of diagnostic dose assays and control effectiveness remains undefined, simple detection of resistance in a mosquito population is not sufficient evidence to implement a change in insecticide policy. In this study, we used variants of WHO assays and bottle assays of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (Atlanta, GA, USA) to quantify the level of pyrethroid resistance in a population of An. gambiae mosquitoes from Burkina Faso over a 3-year period. A high level of resistance was observed. The lack of comparator data from across Africa makes it impossible to conclude whether the pyrethroid resistance levels seen in Burkina Faso are atypical. However, these data should raise concerns for malaria control across Africa because we demonstrate that this level of resistance is causing operational failure of the insecticides used in LLINs. Materials and Methods The study site was in Vallée de Kou (Bama) in southwestern Burkina Faso, ≈25 km from the city of Bobo-Dioulasso. It consists of 7 small villages (area 1,200 hectares) and has been a major rice cultivation site since the 1970s. The area is surrounded by cotton-, rice-, and vegetable-growing areas in which insecticide use is intensive ( 6 ). Multiple rounds of collections of third and fourth instar Anopheles spp. larvae were performed in a 1-km2 radius from village 7 during June–July 2011, October 2011, June 2012, and July–October 2013. Mosquitoes from each collection round were pooled and reared to adults in insectaries at the Institut de Recherche en Sciences de la Sante/Centre Muraz in Bobo-Dioulasso or the Centre National de Recherche et de Formation sur le Paludisme (CNRFP) in Ouagadougou. Species were identified for a subset of mosquitoes from each collection round by using the Sine 200 PCR ( 7 ). Non–blood fed An. gambiae female mosquitoes (3–5 days old) were tested with 5 insecticides in 4 insecticide classes: 0.75% permethrin (type I pyrethroid) and 0.05% deltamethrin (type II pyrethroid); 4% DDT (organochlorine); 0.1% bendiocarb (carbamate); and 1% fenitrothion (organophosphate) by using WHO susceptibility tests ( 8 ). Each batch of insecticide-impregnated papers was tested against mosquitoes of the An. gambiae Kisumu laboratory strain (insecticide-susceptible) at the CNRFP bioassay laboratory for quality control. Approximately 100 mosquitoes (4 replicates of 25 mosquitoes) were used per test ( 5 ). The average mortality rate and binomial confidence interval were calculated per insecticide ( 9 ). In 2011 and 2012, the 50% lethality time (LT50) for the VK7 strain of An. gambiae mosquitoes was determined by varying the length of exposure time (60–600 min). The mean mortality rate was recorded per time point, and the LT50 was estimated by fitting a logistic regression model by using logit-transformed probabilities ( 10 ) in R statistical software (http://www.r-project.org). In 2013, CDC bottle bioassays were used to quantify the level of resistance to deltamethrin. Glass 250-mL bottles were coated with different concentration of deltamethrin ranging from 3.125 μg/mL to 125 μg/mL at CNRFP. Bottles were prepared according to CDC guidelines ( 11 ). Female mosquitoes (3–5 days) were aspirated into bottles for 1 h and subsequently transferred to insecticide-free paper cups for 24 h of observation. Four to six replicates were performed for each concentration and for the control bottles (impregnated with acetone). Equivalent age mosquitoes of the Kisumu strain were exposed to various insecticide concentrations (range 0.001 μg/mL–0.5 μg/mL). The 50% lethal dose (LD50) was determined by using R statistical software. A subset of LLINs that were distributed during the 2010 national distribution campaign were collected directly from houses in 2012; householders were given a new LLIN as a replacement. Only nets reportedly washed ≤5 times were included in the study. New net samples of the same type were also obtained from the population or from local markets. Six types of nets were tested: PermaNet 2.0 (deltamethrin coated on polyester; Vestergaard, Lausanne, Switzerland); Interceptor (α-cypermethrin coated on polyester; BASF, Florham Park, NJ, USA); DawaPlus (deltamethrin coated on polyester; TANA Netting Ltd., Bangkok, Thailand); NetProtect (deltamethrin incorporated into polyethylene; BESTNET, Kolding, Denmark); PermaNet 3.0 (deltamethrin coated on polyester with strengthened border side panels and deltamethrin and piperonyl butoxide incorporated into a polyethylene roof; Vestergaard); and Olyset (permethrin incorporated into polyethylene; Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan).. Cone bioassays were performed according to WHO procedures ( 12 ) by using non–blood fed VK7 mosquitoes (3–5 days old) (obtained from larvae collection during October–December 2012) and Kisumu strain mosquitoes. Approximately 60 mosquitoes were assessed per net by using net samples from 2 sides and the top (20 mosquitoes/net sample). Mosquitoes were exposed to the insecticide for 3 min. Knockdown was recorded after 60 min, and the mortality rate was determined 24 h later. Mortality rates after exposure to each net were compared for wild-type and laboratory susceptible (laboratory raised) mosquitoes by using the Fisher exact test. High-performance liquid chromatography was used to measure the insecticide content of 12 nets. Triplicate samples were tested from each net, and insecticide was extracted from five 8-cm2 disks for each sample by vortexing them in acetone. A 10-μL aliquot was injected onto a reverse-phase, 250 mm, C18 column (Acclaim 120; Dionex, Sunnyvale, CA, USA). Separation was achieved by using a mobile phase of methanol/water (90:10 vol/vol) and at flow rate of 1 mL/min. Pyrethroid elution was monitored by absorption at 232 nm and quantified by peak integration (Chromeleon; Dionex). The quantity of pyrethroid insecticide was determined from a standard curve established with known concentration of pyrethroid insecticide. Results All An. gambiae VK7 mosquitoes collected were the M form, except for those collected during October 2011 and June–July 2013, of which the M form comprised 92% (315/335) and 90% (258/287) of the An. gambiae sensu lato populations, respectively. Susceptibility to 5 insecticides was assessed in adults emerging from VK7 strain larval collections in 3 successive years. An. gambiae mosquitoes remained fully susceptible to fenitrothion and showed a high mortality rate to bendiocarb (86.5% in June 2013) but low mortality rates to DDT (range 0%–3%) and for the pyrethroids deltamethrin and permethrin (range 1%–6%) However, no significant differences were found between results of the 3 successive years (p = 0.055) (Figure 1). Figure 1 Results of World Health Organization (WHO) susceptibility tests for Anopheles gambiae VK7 mosquitoes, Burkina Faso. Adult female mosquitos were exposed to the WHO diagnostic dose of insecticides for 1 h, and mortality rates were recorded 24 h later. Error bars indicate 95% binomial CIs for 3 consecutive years (2011–2013) of sampling. Initially, the strength of resistance was assessed by determining the LT50 for deltamethrin. In July 2011, an LT50 of 1 h 38 min (95% CI 1 h 34 min–1 h 42 min) was obtained but this value increased to 4 h 14 min (95% CI  3 h 53 min–4 h 36 min) in October of the same year (Figure 2), which is a 2.6-fold increase in only 4 months. An accurate LT50 could not be determined for samples collected in June 2012. The longest exposure time of 600 min (10 h) showed a mortality rate of 26% (95% CI 17.85%–35.50%), which extrapolates to an LT50 of 21 h 55 min (95% CI 14 h 3 min–34 h 14 min). The estimated LT50 for the Kisumu strain was 80% and knockdown rate >95%). When we evaluated the nets against VK7 mosquitoes, none of the nets satisfied the knockdown criteria and mean mortality rates were 1,000 fold in 2013 (estimated by LD50) reported in the current study are the highest in the published literature. This level of resistance will almost certainly affect the effectiveness of vector control. We demonstrate that the insecticide resistance of VK7 mosquitoes severely affected the performance of LLINs in standardized laboratory bioassays. In Kenya, pyrethroid-resistant mosquitoes were found resting inside holed LLINs and, when tested by cone bioassays, these LLINs were also found to be ineffective at killing local vectors ( 17 ). Linking resistance strength with increases in malaria transmission is currently not possible but is a key priority for further studies. No data on the strength of pyrethroid resistance in An. funestus mosquitoes in southern Africa in 2000 are available. This resistance has been widely accredited with causing control failure that resulted in a dramatic increase in malaria cases ( 18 ). Finally, it is vital to recognize that insecticide resistance is not the only cause of reduced effectiveness of vector control tools. In the current study, we showed that cone bioassays for new and used LLINS were less effective at killing the field-caught An. gambiae mosquitoes than they were against a standard susceptible (laboratory raised) strain, which provided additional evidence for the effect of resistance. However, we also found that 2 brands of the LLINs (Olyset and DawaPlus) showed poor performance against the susceptible mosquito strain, and another LLIN (Interceptor) showed adequate performance only when new nets were used. Although these data were obtained for a small sample set, they are a cause for concern and must be investigated further.
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            Malaria in Turkey: successful control and strategies for achieving elimination.

            Turkey is located in the middle of Asia, Africa and Europe, close to Caucasia, Balkans and Middle East in subtropical climate zone. Malaria has been known since the early ages of human history and it was one of the leading diseases in Anatolian history, as well. Today, chloroquine-sensitive Plasmodium vivax is the only agent of autochthonous malaria cases in Turkey. The other Plasmodium species identified are isolated from imported cases of malaria. The most common vector of malaria in Turkey is Anopheles sacharovi followed by An. superpictus, An. maculipennis and An. subalpinus. In 2009, pre-elimination stage of Malaria Program was started due to dramatic decline in the number of malaria cases in Turkey (Total, 84; 38 autochthonous cases only in 26 foci in south-eastern Anatolia, and 46 imported cases; incidence: 0.1/100,000). As there were no detected cases of new autochthonous malaria in the first 8 months of 2010, elimination stage was started. The role of the persistent policies and successful applications of the Ministry of Health, such as the strict control of the patients using anti-malarial drugs especially chloroquine, avoidance of resistant insecticides, facilitation of access to patients via Health Transformation Program (HTP), establishment of close contact with the patients' families, and improvement of reporting and surveillance system, was essential. In addition, improvement maintained in the motivations and professional rights of malaria workers, as well in the coordination of field studies and maintenance of a decline or termination in vector-to-person transmission were all achieved with the insistent policies of the Ministry of Health. Other factors that probably contributed to elimination studies include lessening of military operations in south-eastern Anatolia and the lowering of malaria cases in neighbouring countries in recent years. Free access to health services concerning malaria is still successfully conducted throughout the country. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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              European malaria policy in the 1920s and 1930s. The epidemiology of minutiae.

              H. Evans (1989)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Elsevier
                2405-8440
                22 September 2020
                September 2020
                22 September 2020
                : 6
                : 9
                : e04996
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of History of Medicine and Medical Deontology, Medical School, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece
                [b ]Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
                [c ]Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, USA
                [d ]Adolescent Health Unit, Second Department of Pediatrics, "P. and A. Kyriakou" Children’s Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
                [e ]Department of Medicine, Clinic & Laboratory of Pathophysiology, Cardiovascular Prevention & Research Unit, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
                [f ]Institute of Humanities in Medicine, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. sp.michaleas@ 123456gmail.com
                [1]

                These first authors contributed equally to this article.

                Article
                S2405-8440(20)31839-9 e04996
                10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e04996
                7511730
                79f51f48-4a8e-42ea-9d52-55b826ebf72a
                © 2020 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 5 June 2020
                : 23 July 2020
                : 17 September 2020
                Categories
                Research Article

                refugees,malaria,public health,hospital records,seasonality,epidemiology,infectious disease,parasitology

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