Malaria Transmission in Border Regions of the Western Amazon: Incorporating watersheds into timeseries analysis to address disease reintroduction and spillover along the Ecuador-Peru border
Abstract
Since 2010, Amazon-basin countries have experienced a 600% increase in malaria cases,
the most rapid increase compared to any other region of the world. Border regions
have been implicated as important hot spots of malaria transmission, particularly
in Latin America. This study focuses on the Amazon border between Ecuador and Peru,
a region that exhibits a steep gradient of transmission intensity, with Peru having
a much higher incidence of malaria than Ecuador. The study provides a framework for
incorporating watersheds into timeseries analysis to better predict malaria spatial
temporal trends along borders. Results demonstrate that malaria control based on ecologically
defined spatial areas could potentially provide more effective disease management
than malaria control based on administrative boundaries.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22680Citation
Kumar, Rani (2021). Malaria Transmission in Border Regions of the Western Amazon: Incorporating watersheds
into timeseries analysis to address disease reintroduction and spillover along the
Ecuador-Peru border. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22680.Collections
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