Optimal population-level infection detection strategies for malaria control and elimination in a spatial model of malaria transmission
Jaline Gerardin, Caitlin A. Bever, Busiku Hamainza, John M. Miller,, Philip A. Eckhoff, Edward A. Wenger

TL;DR
This study evaluates various malaria detection and treatment strategies using a spatial model, highlighting the limitations of current diagnostics and the potential of targeted approaches for elimination.
Contribution
It introduces an agent-based model incorporating household data and simulates multiple intervention strategies to assess their effectiveness in malaria control and elimination.
Findings
Mass drug campaigns cause overtreatment at low transmission levels.
Hotspot targeting is ineffective due to diagnostic sensitivity limits.
Selective strategies need improved diagnostics for elimination success.
Abstract
Mass campaigns with antimalarial drugs are potentially a powerful tool for local elimination of malaria, yet current diagnostic technologies are insufficiently sensitive to identify all individuals who harbor infections. At the same time, overtreatment of uninfected individuals increases the risk of accelerating emergence of drug resistance and losing community acceptance. Local heterogeneity in transmission intensity may allow campaign strategies that respond to index cases to successfully target subpatent infections while simultaneously limiting overtreatment. While selective targeting of hotspots of transmission has been proposed as a strategy for malaria control, such targeting has not been tested in the context of malaria elimination. Using household locations, demographics, and prevalence data from a survey of four health facility catchment areas in southern Zambia and an…
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