Relationship between changing malaria burden and low birth weight in sub-Saharan Africa: a difference-in-differences study via a pair-of-pairs approach
Siyu Heng, Wendy P. O'Meara, Ryan A. Simmons, Dylan S. Small

TL;DR
This study investigates how natural reductions in malaria burden in sub-Saharan Africa are associated with decreases in low birth weight rates, suggesting that declining malaria prevalence benefits birth outcomes at the population level.
Contribution
It introduces a novel pair-of-pairs difference-in-differences methodology to analyze observational data on malaria and birth weight, providing new insights into population-level effects.
Findings
Malaria prevalence decline reduces low birth weight by approximately 1.48 percentage points.
The impact is greater among first pregnancies, with a reduction of about 3.73 percentage points.
The study supports the importance of malaria burden reduction for improving birth outcomes.
Abstract
Although interventional studies demonstrate that preventing malaria during pregnancy can reduce the low birth weight (i.e., child's birth weight 2,500 grams) rate, it remains unknown whether natural changes in parasite transmission and malaria burden can improve birth outcomes. We conduct an observational study of the effect of changing malaria burden on low birth weight using data from 18,112 births in 19 countries in sub-Saharan African countries during the years 2000--2015. A malaria prevalence decline from a high rate (Plasmodium falciparum parasite rate in children aged 2-up-to-10 (i.e., ) 0.4) to a low rate ( 0.2) is estimated to reduce the rate of low birth weight by 1.48 percentage points (95% confidence interval: 3.70 percentage points reduction, 0.74 percentage points increase), which is a 17% reduction in the low birth…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMalaria Research and Control · Global Maternal and Child Health · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
