The phenomenon of diminishing-returns in the use of bed nets and indoor house spraying and the emerging place of antimalarial medicines in the control of malaria in Uganda

Type Journal Article - African Health Sciences
Title The phenomenon of diminishing-returns in the use of bed nets and indoor house spraying and the emerging place of antimalarial medicines in the control of malaria in Uganda
Author(s)
Volume 14
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 100-110
URL https://www.ajol.info/index.php/ahs/article/viewFile/101693/92652
Abstract
Background
The mosquito net existed long before it was known that mosquitoes transmitted malaria. Therefore it was not intended for
malaria control.
Objectives: To scrutinise the patterns of prevalence and identify any hitherto unknown factors that could explain the
findings.
Methods: Retrieval of records on malaria prevalence.
Findings: Households sprayed in the previous 12 months or owning at least one ITN: 77.8% and IRS: 31.6% in midnorthern
districts. Paradoxically, this was the highest malaria prevalence at 80.1%, hence the phenomenon of diminishingreturns.
The urban children (28.6%), those of post-secondary education mothers (14.3%) and in the highest wealth quintile
(33.3%) had a lower malaria prevalence than those without education (55.8%) and the less wealthy (67.6%), (p < 0.001). In
all, the connection was that the urban (77.4%) and the wealthy (63.8%) sought health care first from hospitals, for proper
treatment. Hence the low prevalence is most likely to be due to anti-malarial medicines and not to bed-nets and IRS, since
the other findings of the survey show that there are no significant differences in bed nets ownership and usage and IRS in
both groups.
Recommendation: Antimalarial medicines should therefore be used to control malaria instead of the nets and IRS.

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