4.7 Article

When climate change couples social neglect: malaria dynamics in Panama

期刊

EMERGING MICROBES & INFECTIONS
卷 3, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1038/emi.2014.27

关键词

Anopheles albimanus; climate change; earth sciences; ecology; Gunas; malaria; Plasmodium; social exclusion

资金

  1. Departamento de Control de Vectores del Ministerio de Salud, Republica de Panama
  2. Instituto Conmemorativo Gorgas de Estudios de La Salud
  3. Nagasaki University-Program for Nurturing Global Leaders in Tropical and Emerging Communicable Diseases

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A major challenge of infectious disease elimination is the need to interrupt pathogen transmission across all vulnerable populations. Ethnic minorities are among the key vulnerable groups deserving special attention in disease elimination initiatives, especially because their lifestyle might be intrinsically linked to locations with high transmission risk. There has been a renewed interest in malaria elimination, which has ignited a quest to understand factors necessary for sustainable malaria elimination, highlighting the need for diverse approaches to address epidemiological heterogeneity across malaria transmission settings. An analysis of malaria incidence among the Guna Amerindians of Panama over the last 34 years showed that this ethnic minority was highly vulnerable to changes that were assumed to not impact malaria transmission. Epidemic outbreaks were linked with El Nino Southern Oscillations and were sensitive to political instability and policy changes that did not ensure adequate attention to the malaria control needs of the Gunas. Our results illustrate how the neglect of minorities poses a threat to the sustainable control and eventual elimination of malaria in Central America and other areas where ethnic minorities do not share the benefits of malaria control strategies intended for dominant ethnic groups.

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