Surveillance and response for high-risk populations: what can malaria elimination programmes learn from the experience of HIV?
Supporting Files
Public Domain
-
Jan 18 2017
-
Details
-
Alternative Title:Malar J
-
Personal Author:
-
Description:To eliminate malaria, malaria programmes need to develop new strategies for surveillance and response appropriate for the changing epidemiology that accompanies transmission decline, in which transmission is increasingly driven by population subgroups whose behaviours place them at increased exposure. Conventional tools of malaria surveillance and response are likely not sufficient in many elimination settings for accessing high-risk population subgroups, such as mobile and migrant populations (MMPs), given their greater likelihood of asymptomatic infections, illegal risk behaviours, limited access to public health facilities, and high mobility including extended periods travelling away from home. More adaptive, targeted strategies are needed to monitor transmission and intervention coverage effectively in these groups. Much can be learned from HIV programmes' experience with "second generation surveillance", including how to rapidly adapt surveillance and response strategies to changing transmission patterns, biological and behavioural surveys that utilize targeted sampling methods for specific behavioural subgroups, and methods for population size estimation. This paper reviews the strategies employed effectively for HIV programmes and offers considerations and recommendations for adapting them to the malaria elimination context.
-
Subjects:
-
Source:Malar J. 16.
-
Pubmed ID:28100237
-
Pubmed Central ID:PMC5241929
-
Document Type:
-
Volume:16
-
Collection(s):
-
Main Document Checksum:urn:sha256:aaa5ecbe2eba8f2609da6b4b148f008fbf0a6410c17cc48482ccce9f2e4b8c61
-
Download URL:
-
File Type:
Supporting Files
ON THIS PAGE
CDC STACKS serves as an archival repository of CDC-published products including
scientific findings,
journal articles, guidelines, recommendations, or other public health information authored or
co-authored by CDC or funded partners.
As a repository, CDC STACKS retains documents in their original published format to ensure public access to scientific information.
As a repository, CDC STACKS retains documents in their original published format to ensure public access to scientific information.
You May Also Like
COLLECTION
CDC Public Access