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Prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum Malaria among Pregnant Students in Dodoma Region, Tanzania: No Cases Have Been Detected
Author(s) -
Karen Nelwin Zablon,
Charles Kakilla,
Tatiana Lykina,
В. В. Минакова,
Alphaxad Chibago,
Zanda Bochkaeva
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
malaria research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.726
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 2090-8075
pISSN - 2044-4362
DOI - 10.1155/2015/473203
Subject(s) - malaria , tanzania , medicine , functional illiteracy , pregnancy , environmental health , diagnosis of malaria , rapid diagnostic test , plasmodium falciparum , pediatrics , family medicine , obstetrics , immunology , geography , biology , environmental planning , political science , law , genetics
Malaria in pregnancy, being often asymptomatic, is a major problem in endemic African countries. It is characterized by anemia and placental malaria leading to poor pregnancy outcomes. In 2001 Tanzania adopted an intermittent-preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) policy, which recommends receiving doses of antimalarial drugs every planned visit to the antenatal care centre (ANC), starting from the second trimester. Currently the policy is valid across the whole country, regardless that there are regions with very low malaria endemicity in Tanzania, such as Dodoma region. The current study aimed to show the real prevalence of malaria among young pregnant women in Dodoma region, by measuring the prevalence of malaria among University of Dodoma (UDOM) students, and to describe the social health care features of student female community. Two methods of malaria diagnostic, microscopy, and rapid test, as well as retrospective inspection of ANC registry book, showed the very low prevalence of malaria disease among pregnant students, approximately 0.3%. Additionally, the sociodemographic data from the questionnaires showed that all students use different malaria preventive measures, and most of them have the regular sexual partner. This fact approves the correlation between illiteracy of woman and the risk of malaria infection transmission.

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