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      Malaria Status in Economic Cooperation Countries; Achievement and Gaps toward United Nations Millennium Development Goals

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Evaluating the malaria status of the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO) member countries relation to goal 6 of 3rd Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which includes have halted by 2015 and begun to reverse the incidence of malaria.

          Methods:

          By 2009, we reviewed the MDGs reports, extracted the data from surveillance system, published, and unpublished data. The main stakeholders, from both governmental and international organizations in the country have been visited and interviewed by the research team as part of the data validation process.

          Results:

          The malaria incidence is very heterogeneous among ECO countries, which differ less than 200 cases in total country in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Azerbaijan to 82,564 cases (2,428/100,000) in Afghanistan and 59,284 cases (881/100,000) in Pakistan and about 18/100,000 in Iran in 2008. Malaria has been a major public health problem in Pakistan and Afghanistan and will continue to pose serious threat to millions of people due to poor environmental and socioeconomic conditions conducive to the spread of disease. The main malaria endemic areas of Iran are in southeastern part of the country; consist of less developed provinces that are bordered in the east by Afghanistan and Pakistan. There are little valid information about proportion of population in malaria-risk areas using effective malaria prevention and treatment measures indicators.

          Conclusion:

          All ECO countries could achieve MDGs malaria indicators by 2015 except Pakistan and Afghanistan, unless preparing urgent intervention programs to fulfill the goals.

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          Factors involved in the re-emergence of malaria in borderline of Iran, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey.

          The borderline of Iran with Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey had been considered a malaria free region. However, in 1991, after the independence of the southern countries of the former Soviet Union, a new threat of malaria importation emerged from those countries into Iran, which was affected by serious epidemics of Plasmodium vivax malaria. Various factors can affect malaria resurgence in this region, such as socioeconomic conditions, especially the displacement of massive populations from war-stricken zones in the Republic of Azerbaijan. Accordingly, in some parts of West-Azerbaijan, East-Azerbaijan, Ardebile and Gilan provinces of Iran, several malaria foci were observed. Construction of dams, people traveling from neighboring countries to Iran, urbanization, irrigation projects, lack of malaria vector control, shortage of drug supplies are also major factors in malaria outbreaks in the region. An investigation was carried out on the bionomics of the main malaria vectors in the region. The result showed that Anopheles sacharovi plays an important role in malaria transmission and An. maculipennis and An. superpictus can be secondary vectors. Larvae were found in slow flowing water and channels with water plants. They were more abundant in June. The parity rate of blood-fed females was high in May. An. sacharovi is active from May to October with two peaks of activity, which occur in August and October. The population of this species is higher in animal shelters with a zoophicity of 95%. About 90% of bites took place in the second half of the night. A CDC light trap can also catch this species. Susceptibility testing using the WHO-recommended diagnostic doses of insecticides, revealed that this species is resistant to DDT and dieldrin, but susceptible to malathion, fenitrothion, propoxur, bendiocarb, lambdacyhalothrin, permethrin, cyfluthrin, etofenprox and deltamethrin.
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            Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors

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              Malaria control--addressing challenges to ambitious goals.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Iran J Public Health
                Iran. J. Public Health
                IJPH
                Iranian Journal of Public Health
                Tehran University of Medical Sciences
                2251-6085
                2251-6093
                31 July 2012
                2012
                : 41
                : 7
                : 7-13
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Dept. of Epidemiology and Biostatistics , School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
                [2 ]Iranian Epidemiological Association, Tehran, Iran
                [3 ]National Institute of Health Research, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
                [4 ]Dept. of Health Management and Economics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
                [5 ]Word Health Organization Country Office, Tehran, Iran
                [6 ]Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding Author: Tel: 0098-21-88989122, E-mail address: malekafzali@ 123456sina.tums.ac.ir
                Article
                ijph-41-7
                3469021
                23113204
                184f9bbd-ae49-45f3-b1c9-8a4b364f6aa0
                Copyright © Iranian Public Health Association & Tehran University of Medical Sciences

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial 3.0 License (CC BY-NC 3.0), which allows users to read, copy, distribute and make derivative works for non-commercial purposes from the material, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly.

                History
                : 11 January 2012
                : 12 May 2012
                Categories
                Review Article

                Public health
                united nations,malaria,evaluation,asia
                Public health
                united nations, malaria, evaluation, asia

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