2015

Author(s): Dos Santos S, Rautu I, Diop M, Illou MMA, Ndonky A, Le Hesran JY, Lalou R

In African growing cities, vector-borne diseases (such as malaria and dengue) contribute to a large burden of childhood morbidity and mortality. During the peak of transmission, environmental factors can have an influence on those fevers, apart from the individual and household characteristics. A household survey conducted in 2008 in Dakar was completed by a community questionnaire on environmental threats that could be factored into multilevel analyses. Using a randomized sample of 7,300 children from 3,000 households dispatched within 50 neighborhoods, a three-level modeling process is presented. Rates of recent fever varied substantially from one neighborhood to another, ranging between 10 and 37 %. Findings indicate that the onset of fever is influenced by factors from all three hierarchical levels, with neighborhood factors playing a relatively lower role than the other two. Among the environmental factors, the effect of environmental sanitation is particularly interesting.

Journal: Population and Environment