Rapid Assessment of Prevalence of Malaria among Patients of a Referral Hospital in Oweri South East Nigeria

Authors

  • Ajero Chigbo Medo U Department of Animal and Environmental Biology, Imo State University, Nigeria. Author
  • Chigbo Nkenna Udoka Department of Medical Microbiology, Imo State University, Nigeria. Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47363/JDCRS/2022(3)128

Keywords:

Malaria, Plasmodium, Prevalence, Hospital Patients, Owerri

Abstract

Malaria has social consequences and exerts a heavy burden on economic development in Nigeria. This study was undertaken to determine the prevalence of malaria among out and in patients attending a referral hospital in Owerri South-East Nigeria between January and October 2019. Two hundred and thirty-five patients consisting of 114 males and 121 females were engaged in the study after obtaining their consent. Capillary blood samples were collected
from finger-pricked blood using Rapid Diagnostic Test kit (ICT COMBO, Core Diagnostic, U.K) for detection of Plasmodium falciparum and pan malaria antigen Pf/Pan for non-falciparum species. The data were collated and analysed with descriptive and chi-square statistics with significance set at 0.5. The result recorded an overall malaria prevalence of 62.55%. Female patients had significantly higher (77.72%) malaria prevalence than males (51.75%) (p<0.05). Age-related prevalence of malaria within the study period showed that malaria prevalence across the age groups exceeded 50%, except for the age group 40-49 years with a prevalence of 45.61%. However, the age-related prevalence of malaria was not significantly different, (p >0.05). The result reveals an active transmission of malaria parasites which constitute a public health burden. There is a need for improved effort in the prevention and control of this scourge. 

Author Biographies

  • Ajero Chigbo Medo U, Department of Animal and Environmental Biology, Imo State University, Nigeria.

    Ajero Chigbo Medo U, Department of Animal and Environmental Biology, Imo State University, Nigeria.

  • Chigbo Nkenna Udoka, Department of Medical Microbiology, Imo State University, Nigeria.

    Chigbo Nkenna Udoka, Department of Medical Microbiology, Imo State University, Nigeria.

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Published

2022-03-29