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Association between early childhood exposure to malaria and children’s pre-school development: evidence from the Zambia early childhood development project

机译:儿童早期感染疟疾与儿童学龄前发展之间的关联:赞比亚儿童早期发展项目的证据

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Background Despite major progress made over the past 10?years, malaria remains one of the primary causes of ill health in developing countries in general, and in sub-Saharan Africa in particular. Whilst a large literature has documented the frequency and severity of malaria infections for children under-five years, relatively little evidence is available regarding the impact of early childhood malaria exposure on subsequent child development. Methods The objective of the study was to assess the associations between early childhood exposure to malaria and pre-school development. Child assessment data for 1,410 children in 70 clusters collected through the 2010 Zambian Early Childhood Development Project was linked with malaria parasite prevalence data from the 2006 Zambia Malaria Indicator Survey. Linear and logistic models were used to estimate the effect of early childhood exposure to malaria on anthropometric outcomes as well as on a range of cognitive and behavioural development measures. Results No statistically significant associations were found between parasite exposure and children’s height and weight. Exposure to the malaria parasite was, however, associated with lower ability to cope with cognitive tasks administered by interviewers (z-score difference ?1.11, 95% CI ?2.43–0.20), as well as decreased overall socio-emotional development as assessed by parents (z-score difference ?1.55, 95% CI ?3.13–0.02). No associations were found between malaria exposure and receptive vocabulary or fine-motor skills. Conclusions The results presented in this paper suggest potentially large developmental consequences of early childhood exposure to malaria. Continued efforts to lower the burden of malaria will not only reduce under-five mortality, but may also have positive returns in terms of the long-term well-being of exposed cohorts.
机译:背景尽管在过去的10年中取得了重大进展,但疟疾仍然是整个发展中国家,尤其是撒哈拉以南非洲地区健康不良的主要原因之一。尽管有大量文献记录了5岁以下儿童的疟疾感染频率和严重程度,但关于幼儿期疟疾暴露对随后儿童发育的影响的证据相对较少。方法该研究的目的是评估儿童早期接触疟疾与学龄前发展之间的关系。通过2010年赞比亚幼儿发展项目收集的70个群中的1,410名儿童的儿童评估数据与2006年赞比亚疟疾指标调查中的疟疾寄生虫流行率数据相关联。线性和逻辑模型用于估计幼儿期接触疟疾对人体测量结果以及一系列认知和行为发展指标的影响。结果未发现寄生虫暴露与儿童身高和体重之间有统计学意义的关联。然而,接触疟疾寄生虫与处理访调员执行的认知任务的能力较低相关(z得分差异为1.11,95%CI为2.43–0.20),并且总体社会情感发展下降父母(z得分差异为1.55,95%CI为3.13-0.02)。在疟疾暴露与接受词汇或精细动作技能之间未发现关联。结论本文提出的结果表明,儿童早期接触疟疾可能会产生巨大的发展后果。继续努力减少疟疾负担,不仅会降低五岁以下儿童的死亡率,而且就接触人群的长期健康而言,也可能会带来积极的回报。

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