Publication | Open Access
High altitude epidemic malaria in Bamian province, central Afghanistan
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2021
Year
Global HealthMalariaMalaria ExpertsInternational HealthVector-parasite RelationshipPlasmodium Falciparum MalariaDisease OutbreakVector Borne DiseaseCentral AfghanistanRemote ValleyPublic HealthMedicineVector ControlEpidemiologyParasitology
We report an epidemic of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in the remote valley of Bamian (altitude 2250 m-2400 m) in the central highlands of Afghanistan. A team of malaria experts from the World Health Organization and HealthNet International carried out the investigation. A total of 215 peripheral blood smears were obtained and 63 cases of malaria (90.5% P. falciparum, the remainder P. vivax) were confirmed. The study revealed that areas vulnerable to malaria in Afghanistan are more widespread than previously recognized. The area had been malaria-free until recently, when the disease appears to have been introduced as a consequence of protracted conflict and resultant population movement, and transmitted locally during the short summer months. The outbreak led to severe morbidity and high mortality in a province having only a few poorly-provisioned health care facilities.