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Malaria Journal | 2014

The epidemiology of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum malaria in China, 2004–2012: from intensified control to elimination

Qian Zhang; Shengjie Lai; Canjun Zheng; Honglong Zhang; Sheng Zhou; Wenbiao Hu; Archie Clements; Xiao-Nong Zhou; Weizhong Yang; Simon I. Hay; Hongjie Yu; Zhongjie Li

BackgroundIn China, the national malaria elimination programme has been operating since 2010. This study aimed to explore the epidemiological changes in patterns of malaria in China from intensified control to elimination stages.MethodsData on nationwide malaria cases from 2004 to 2012 were extracted from the Chinese national malaria surveillance system. The secular trend, gender and age features, seasonality, and spatial distribution by Plasmodium species were analysed.ResultsIn total, 238,443 malaria cases were reported, and the proportion of Plasmodium falciparum increased drastically from <10% before 2010 to 55.2% in 2012. From 2004 to 2006, malaria showed a significantly increasing trend and with the highest incidence peak in 2006 (4.6/100,000), while from 2007 onwards, malaria decreased sharply to only 0.18/100,000 in 2012. Males and young age groups became the predominantly affected population. The areas affected by Plasmodium vivax malaria shrunk, while areas affected by P. falciparum malaria expanded from 294 counties in 2004 to 600 counties in 2012.ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that malaria has decreased dramatically in the last five years, especially since the Chinese government launched a malaria elimination programme in 2010, and areas with reported falciparum malaria cases have expanded over recent years. These findings suggest that elimination efforts should be improved to meet these changes, so as to achieve the nationwide malaria elimination goal in China in 2020.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Plasmodium falciparum malaria importation from Africa to China and its mortality: an analysis of driving factors

Shengjie Lai; Nicola A. Wardrop; Zhuojie Huang; Claudio Bosco; Junling Sun; Tomas J. Bird; Amy Wesolowski; Sheng Zhou; Qian Zhang; Canjun Zheng; Zhongjie Li; Andrew J. Tatem; Hongjie Yu

Plasmodium falciparum malaria importation from Africa to China is rising with increasing Chinese overseas investment and international travel. Identifying networks and drivers of this phenomenon as well as the contributors to high case-fatality rate is a growing public health concern to enable efficient response. From 2011–2015, 8653 P. falciparum cases leading to 98 deaths (11.3 per 1000 cases) were imported from 41 sub-Saharan countries into China, with most cases (91.3%) occurring in labour-related Chinese travellers. Four strongly connected groupings of origin African countries with destination Chinese provinces were identified, and the number of imported cases was significantly associated with the volume of air passengers to China (P = 0.006), parasite prevalence in Africa (P < 0.001), and the amount of official development assistance from China (P < 0.001) with investment in resource extraction having the strongest relationship with parasite importation. Risk factors for deaths from imported cases were related to the capacity of malaria diagnosis and diverse socioeconomic factors. The spatial heterogeneity uncovered, principal drivers explored, and risk factors for mortality found in the rising rates of P. falciparum malaria importation to China can serve to refine malaria elimination strategies and the management of cases, and high risk groups and regions should be targeted.


Malaria Journal | 2016

Erratum to: Epidemiologic features of overseas imported malaria in the People's Republic of China.

Zhongjie Li; Qian Zhang; Canjun Zheng; Sheng Zhou; Junling Sun; Zike Zhang; Qibin Geng; Honglong Zhang; Liping Wang; Shengjie Lai; Wenbiao Hu; Archie Clements; Xiao‑Nong Zhou; Weizhong Yang

© 2016 The Author(s). This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/ publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. Erratum to: Malar J (2016) 15:141 DOI 10.1186/s12936‐016‐1188‐7 The authors of [1] would like to highlight the following corrections to their original article published in Malaria Journal. In the third paragraph of ‘Case detection and clinical outcome’ in the “Results” section of [1], “acute renal dysfunction (5.3 %)” should be replaced as “severe anaemia (5.3 %)”. In addition, in Table 3 of the original publication [1], the Overall Complicated signs/symptoms on coma should be 25 (1.8 %), Cerebral lesion be 23 (1.6 %), Gastrointestinal damage 32 (2.3 %), Liver function impairment 38 (2.7 %) and Severe anaemia 25 (1.8 %). The following is our corrected Table 3. We regret these mistakes. Open Access Malaria Journal


Malaria Journal | 2016

Trends of imported malaria in China 2010–2014: analysis of surveillance data

Sheng Zhou; Zhongjie Li; Chris Cotter; Canjun Zheng; Qian Zhang; Huazhong Li; Zhou Ss; Xiaonong Zhou; Hongjie Yu; Weizhong Yang


Malaria Journal | 2016

Epidemiologic features of overseas imported malaria in the People's Republic of China

Zhongjie Li; Qian Zhang; Canjun Zheng; Sheng Zhou; Junling Sun; Zike Zhang; Qibin Geng; Honglong Zhang; Liping Wang; Shengjie Lai; Wenbiao Hu; Archie Clements; Xiao‑Nong Zhou; Weizhong Yang


Infectious Diseases of Poverty | 2016

Comparative evaluation of the diagnosis, reporting and investigation of malaria cases in China, 2005–2014: transition from control to elimination for the national malaria programme

Junling Sun; Sheng Zhou; Qibin Geng; Qian Zhang; Zike Zhang; Canjun Zheng; Wenbiao Hu; Archie Clements; Shengjie Lai; Zhongjie Li


Infectious Diseases of Poverty | 2016

A practical community-based response strategy to interrupt Ebola transmission in sierra Leone, 2014–2015

Zhongjie Li; Wen-Xiao Tu; Xiao-Chun Wang; Guo-Qing Shi; Zun-Dong Yin; Hai-Jun Su; Tao Shen; Da-Peng Zhang; Jian-Dong Li; Shan Lv; Chun-Li Cao; Rui-Qian Xie; Hong-Zhou Lu; Rong-Meng Jiang; Zheng Cao; Zhi-Jie An; Lei-Lei Li; Jie Xu; Yan-Wen Xiong; Wei Zang; Wei Zhang; Hong-Wei Zhang; Wen-Sen Chen; Hua Ling; Wen Xu; Jian Cai; Huan-Jin Luo; Xue-Sheng Xing; Canjun Zheng; Qiang Wei


Iranian Journal of Public Health | 2015

Epidemiological Feature of Visceral Leishmaniasis in China, 2004-2012

Shuqing Zhao; Zhongjie Li; Sheng Zhou; Canjun Zheng; Huilai Ma


Archive | 2016

Additional file 1: of A practical community-based response strategy to interrupt Ebola transmission in sierra Leone, 2014â 2015

Zhongjie Li; Wen-Xiao Tu; Xiao-Chun Wang; Guo-Qing Shi; Zun-Dong Yin; Hai-Jun Su; Tao Shen; Da-Peng Zhang; Jian-Dong Li; Shan Lv; Chun-Li Cao; Rui-Qian Xie; Hong-Zhou Lu; Rong-Meng Jiang; Zheng Cao; Zhi-Jie An; Lei-Lei Li; Jie Xu; Yan-Wen Xiong; Wei Zang; Wei Zhang; Hong-Wei Zhang; Wen-Sen Chen; Hua Ling; Wen Xu; Jian Cai; Huan-Jin Luo; Xue-Sheng Xing; Canjun Zheng; Qiang Wei


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016

Comparative evaluation of the diagnosis, reporting and investigation of malaria cases in China, 2005–2014: Transition from control to elimination for the national malaria programme

Junling Sun; Sheng Zhou; Qibin Geng; Qian Zhang; Zike Zhang; Canjun Zheng; Wenbiao Hu; Archie Clements; Shengjie Lai; Zhongjie Li

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Zhongjie Li

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Sheng Zhou

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Qian Zhang

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Shengjie Lai

University of Southampton

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Archie Clements

Australian National University

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Wenbiao Hu

Queensland University of Technology

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Junling Sun

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Weizhong Yang

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Honglong Zhang

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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