Insecticide‐treated bednet use, anaemia, and malaria parasitaemia in Blantyre District, Malawi
Open Access
- 20 March 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Tropical Medicine & International Health
- Vol. 7 (3) , 220-230
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3156.2002.00846.x
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the use of insecticide‐treated bednets and the effectiveness of social marketing for their distribution. METHODS Systematic cluster sample survey of 1080 households in 36 census enumeration areas across Blantyre district, Malawi, in February 2000. RESULTS A total of 672 households had one or more children under 5. Bednet ownership was low (20.5% of households) overall, and significantly lower in rural areas than urban areas (6.4 vs. 29.8%, P=0.001). Only 3.3% of rural children under 5 had slept under a net the previous night, compared with 24.0% of urban children (P < 0.001). When asked why they did not own a net, nearly all (94.9%) caretakers in households without nets stated they had no money to buy them. In multivariate statistical models that controlled for the influence of house structure, urban vs. rural location, gender of the head of household, and the primary caretaker's education, rural children under 5 in households without nets experienced a statistically significant higher prevalence of malaria parasitaemia [RR (risk ratio) 4.9, 95% CI (confidence interval) 2.3–10.5] than children in households with at least one bednet. This was also true for urban children under 5 (RR 2.1, 95% CI 1.0–4.2, P=0.04). CONCLUSION Social marketing approaches to promoting insecticide‐treated nets in Blantyre District may have produced measurable health benefits for children in those households in which residents bought and used the products. Market‐based approaches may take years to achieve high levels of coverage and may exaggerate inequities between urban and rural populations.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of large-scale social marketing of insecticide-treated nets on child survival in rural TanzaniaThe Lancet, 2001
- Insecticide treated bed nets to prevent malariaBMJ, 2001
- Impact on malaria morbidity of a programme supplying insecticide treated nets in children aged under 2 years in Tanzania: community cross sectional studyBMJ, 2001
- Analysis of repeated hemoglobin measures in full-term, normal birth weight Kenyan children between birth and four years of age. III. The Asemobo Bay Cohort Project.The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1999
- Insecticide‐treated curtains reduce the prevalence and intensity of malaria infection in Burkina FasoTropical Medicine & International Health, 1999
- KINET: a social marketing programme of treated nets and net treatment for malaria control in Tanzania, with evaluation of child health and long-term survivalTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1999
- Longitudinal cohort study of the epidemiology of malaria infections in an area of intense malaria transmission I. Description of study site, general methodology, and study population.The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1999
- Relative versus absolute risk of dying reduction after using insecticide‐treated nets for malaria control in AfricaTropical Medicine & International Health, 1998
- Do insecticide‐treated curtains reduce all‐cause child mortality in Burkina Faso?Tropical Medicine & International Health, 1997
- Mortality and morbidity from malaria in Gambian children after introduction of an impregnated bednet programmeThe Lancet, 1995