Assessment and Modelling of Malaria outbreak (the case study of Arba Minch area)

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dc.date.accessioned 2017-07-14T12:03:58Z
dc.date.available 2017-07-14T12:03:58Z
dc.date.issued 2009-08
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/565
dc.description.abstract Assessment and Modelling of Malaria outbreak (the case study of Arba Minch area) The impact of climate and other environmental changes on population health poses radical challenges to scientists. A fundamental characteristic of this topic was the persistent combination of complexity and uncertainty. This thesis seeks to identify the nature and scope of the problem, and to explore the conceptual and methodological approaches to studying these qualitative and quantitative relationships, modelling their future realization, providing estimates of health impacts, and communicating the attendant uncertainties. Climate has been established as an important determinant in the distribution of vectors and pathogens. The purpose of this case study was to seek out relationships between the global and local climatic variables, which currently best describe malaria outbreak. So, climate data, malaria morbidity data and different oceanic and atmospheric indices were used to explore the temporal and spatial climatic pattern in terms of the annual and seasonal outlook with respect to increasing/decreasing trend regarding malaria prevalence. The correlation analyses between seasonal rainfall of Arba Minch area and climatic parameters such as local and global oceanic-atmospheric indices showed significant relationship with seasonal rainfall of the area in addition to ENSO. Forecasting of March to May (MAM) and September to November (SON) seasons using climatic parameters was also possible with reasonable skill of at the area. The stepwise multiple linear regression method was used to develop the forecasting model. In addition, the analyses done using SYSTAT 8 . 0 software in the development of malaria outbreak predictive model on which stepwise multiple linear regressions was employed to screening potential predictors. The malaria outbreak model was used to show the predictability of malaria incidence before occurrence with certain skill at Arba Minch and showed a factor of 12.5% in extent that climate has to force malaria. Therefore, user tailored seasonal climate early warning information is very critical for malaria outbreak over the study area. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Arba Minch, Ethiopia en_US
dc.subject malaria outbreak, incidence, modelling en_US
dc.title Assessment and Modelling of Malaria outbreak (the case study of Arba Minch area) en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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