Study protocol: improving response to malaria in the Amazon through identification of inter-community networks and human mobility in border regions of Ecuador, Peru and Brazil

Author:

Janko Mark MORCID,Araujo Andrea L,Ascencio Edson JORCID,Guedes Gilvan R,Vasco Luis E,Santos Reinaldo OORCID,Damasceno Camila P,Medrano Perla G,Chacón-Uscamaita Pamela R,Gunderson Annika KORCID,O’Malley Sara,Kansara Prakrut H,Narvaez Manuel B,Coombes CarolinaORCID,Pizzitutti Francesco,Salmon-Mulanovich Gabriela,Zaitchik Benjamin F,Mena Carlos F,Lescano Andres G,Barbieri Alisson F,Pan William KORCID

Abstract

IntroductionUnderstanding human mobility’s role in malaria transmission is critical to successful control and elimination. However, common approaches to measuring mobility are ill-equipped for remote regions such as the Amazon. This study develops a network survey to quantify the effect of community connectivity and mobility on malaria transmission.MethodsWe measure community connectivity across the study area using a respondent driven sampling design among key informants who are at least 18 years of age. 45 initial communities will be selected: 10 in Brazil, 10 in Ecuador and 25 in Peru. Participants will be recruited in each initial node and administered a survey to obtain data on each community’s mobility patterns. Survey responses will be ranked and the 2–3 most connected communities will then be selected and surveyed. This process will be repeated for a third round of data collection. Community network matrices will be linked with each country’s malaria surveillance system to test the effects of mobility on disease risk.Ethics and disseminationThis study protocol has been approved by the institutional review boards of Duke University (USA), Universidad San Francisco de Quito (Ecuador), Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia (Peru) and Universidade Federal Minas Gerais (Brazil). Results will be disseminated in communities by the end of the study.

Funder

Duke Climate and Health Initiative

National Institutes of Health

Fogarty International Center

CONCYTEC

Publisher

BMJ

Reference45 articles.

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3. The Hitchhiking Parasite: Why Human Movement Matters to Malaria Transmission and What We Can Do About It

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5. A large proportion of P. Falciparum isolates in the Amazon region of Peru lack Pfhrp2 and Pfhrp3: implications for malaria rapid diagnostic tests;Gamboa;PLOS ONE,2010

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