Association between malaria and household air pollution interventions in a predominantly rural area of Ghana.

Kwaku Poku Asante ; Blair J Wylie ; Felix B Oppong ; Ashlinn Quinn ; Stephaney Gyaase ; Alison G Lee ; Kenneth Ayuurebobi Ae-Ngibise ; Katrin Burkart ; Ellen Abrafi Boamah-Kaali ; Seyram Kaali ; +4 more... Steven Chillrud ; Patrick L Kinney ; Seth Owusu-Agyei ; Darby Jack ; (2023) Association between malaria and household air pollution interventions in a predominantly rural area of Ghana. Malaria journal, 22 (1). 106-. ISSN 1475-2875 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-022-04431-z
Copy

BACKGROUND: Though anecdotal evidence suggests that smoke from HAP has a repellent effect on mosquitoes, very little work has been done to assess the effect of biomass smoke on malaria infection. The study, therefore, sought to investigate the hypothesis that interventions to reduce household biomass smoke may have an unintended consequence of increasing placental malaria or increase malaria infection in the first year of life. METHODS: This provides evidence from a randomized controlled trial among 1414 maternal-infant pairs in the Kintampo North and Kintampo South administrative areas of Ghana. Logistic regression was used to assess the association between study intervention assignment (LPG, Biolite or control) and placental malaria. Finally, an extended Cox model was used to assess the association between study interventions and all episodes of malaria parasitaemia in the first year of infant's life. RESULTS: The prevalence of placental malaria was 24.6%. Out of this, 20.8% were acute infections, 18.7% chronic infections and 60.5% past infections. The study found no statistical significant association between the study interventions and all types of placental malaria (OR = 0.88; 95% CI 0.59-1.30). Of the 1165 infants, 44.6% experienced at least one episode of malaria parasitaemia in the first year of life. The incidence of first and/or only episode of malaria parasitaemia was however found to be similar among the study arms. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that cookstove interventions for pregnant women and infants, when combined with additional malaria prevention strategies, do not lead to an increased risk of malaria among pregnant women and infants.


picture_as_pdf
Asante-etal-2023-Association-between-malaria-and-household-air-pollution-interventions.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads