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Malaria Elimination in Costa Rica: Changes in Treatment and Mass Drug Administration

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posted on 2020-11-17, 00:00 authored by Troy Alex PerkinsTroy Alex Perkins, Jose M. Gutierrez Alvarado, John H. Huber, Luis F. Chaves, Luis M. Romero, Marin Rodriguez, Rodrigo, Monica Prado, Melissa Ramirez Rojas, Obdulio Rojas Salas
Costa Rica is a candidate to eliminate malaria by 2020. The remaining malaria transmission hotspots are located within the Huetar Norte Region (HNR), where 90% of the country's 147 malaria cases have occurred since 2016, following a 33-month period without transmission. Here, we examine changes in transmission with the implementation of a supervised seven-day chloroquine and primaquine treatment (7DCPT). We also evaluate the impact of a focal mass drug administration (MDA) in January 2019 at Boca Arenal, the town in HNR reporting the greatest local transmission. We found that the change to a seven-day treatment protocol, from the prior five-day program, was associated with a 98% reduction in malaria transmission. The MDA helped to reduce transmission, keeping the basic reproduction number,R-T, significantly below 1, for at least four months. However, following new imported cases from Nicaragua, autochthonous transmission resumed. Our results highlight the importance of appropriate treatment delivery to reduce malaria transmission, and the challenge that highly mobile populations, if their malaria is not treated, pose to regional elimination efforts in Mesoamerica and Mexico.

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Date Created

2020-07-01

Date Modified

2020-11-17

Language

  • English

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All rights reserved.

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Microorganisms

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    Environmental Change Initiative

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