Malaria Risk and Prevention in Asian Migrants to Angola

The number of Asian migrants working in sub-Saharan developing countries like Angola has been increasing. Their malaria risk, prevention, and care-seeking practices have not been characterized. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 733 Chinese and Southeast Asian migrants in Angola. Respondents...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 2020-11, Vol.103 (5), p.1918-1926
Hauptverfasser: Martins, José Franco, Marques, Cátia, Nieto-Andrade, Benjamin, Kelley, Julia, Patel, Dhruviben, Nace, Doug, Herman, Camelia, Barratt, Joel, Ponce de León, Gabriel, Talundzic, Eldin, Rogier, Eric, Halsey, Eric S, Plucinski, Mateusz M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The number of Asian migrants working in sub-Saharan developing countries like Angola has been increasing. Their malaria risk, prevention, and care-seeking practices have not been characterized. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 733 Chinese and Southeast Asian migrants in Angola. Respondents were interviewed and provided blood samples. Samples were analyzed to detect antigen and characterize host anti- response. Positive samples were genotyped using the marker. Most respondents (72%; 95% CI: 68-75) reported using bed nets, but less than 1% reported using chemoprophylaxis. Depending on the assay, 1-4% of respondents had evidence of active malaria infection. By contrast, 55% (95% CI: 52-59) were seropositive for antibodies. Most infections were , but infection and/or exposure to and was also detected. Seroprevalence by time in Angola showed most exposure occurred locally. One respondent had sufficiently high parasitemia for genotyping, which showed that the infection was likely locally acquired despite recent travel to home country. Asian migrants to Angola are at substantial risk of malaria. Employers should consider enhanced malaria prevention programs, including chemoprophylaxis; embassies should encourage prevention practices. Angolan healthcare workers should be aware of high malaria exposure in Asian migrants.
ISSN:0002-9637
1476-1645
DOI:10.4269/ajtmh.20-0706