Abstract
The current study has been undertaken by studying the data from the hospital registers at the Kasugu District Hospital, Malawi. The malaria cases of 2014 were chosen for the study. They typically represent disease distribution based on the ages and genders of the patients. The data suggest that the cure rates among patients under age 5 and above do not have any significant difference, contrary to the commonly anticipated outcome that the older children should have better developed immune systems and should have higher cure rates. A notable point is there are huge dichotomies between genders in terms of the reported registered cases, the cure and mortality rates. The gender differentiation in the reporting and management of malaria is understood under the contemporary socio-cultural beliefs and economic realities of the Malawian society. This analysis has been carried out from a qualitative perspective, but with an attempt to identify a pattern from a year's length of statistical data.
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CITATION STYLE
Richard, E. K., David, S. C., Seung, H. H., Brian, L., Jeffrey, Y. L., Allen, H., … Jerome, Z. N. (2016). Analysis of hospital account of malaria cases in a Malawian hospital. Journal of Public Health and Epidemiology, 8(10), 229–235. https://doi.org/10.5897/jphe2016.0805
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