Abstract
Mass drug administration (MDA) in 1981 reduced the incidence rates of both Plasmodium vivax and P falciparum infection in Nicaragua. Impact on P vivax cases lasted for four months and on P falciparum for seven. Subtherapeutic primaquine doses, the shorter extrinsic cycle of P vivax in the insect vector, and the timing of MDA at a high-transmission period of the year may explain the limited effects of the campaign. Positive results of the anti-malaria campaign included improvements in case-finding and routine surveillance, the apparent prevention of at least 9200 malaria cases, the training of some 70 000 anti-malaria volunteers, and the participation of about 70% of the population in anti-malarial activities. © 1983.
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CITATION STYLE
Garfield, R. M., & Vermund, S. H. (1983). CHANGES IN MALARIA INCIDENCE AFTER MASS DRUG ADMINISTRATION IN NICARAGUA. The Lancet, 322(8348), 500–503. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(83)90523-8
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