2020
DOI: 10.21203/rs.2.21392/v2
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Mass radical treatment of a group of foreign workers to mitigate the risk of re-establishment of malaria in Sri Lanka

Abstract: Background Following malaria elimination, Sri Lanka was free from indigenous transmission for six consecutive years, until the first introduced case was reported in December 2018. The source of transmission (index case) was a member of a group of 32 migrant workers from India and the location of transmission was their residence reporting a high prevalence of the primary vector for malaria. Despite extensive vector control the situation was highly susceptible to onward transmission if another of the group devel… Show more

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“…The screening travel-cohorts in both reactive and proactive screening as suggested by this study becomes even more important because of the current post-war development boom in Sri Lanka. This has led to large numbers of migrant worker populations, business travellers and tourists entering the country, which has considerably increased the risk of importing malaria [4,23]. Equally important is the finding that the screening of spatial cohorts in either category led to hardly any case detections.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The screening travel-cohorts in both reactive and proactive screening as suggested by this study becomes even more important because of the current post-war development boom in Sri Lanka. This has led to large numbers of migrant worker populations, business travellers and tourists entering the country, which has considerably increased the risk of importing malaria [4,23]. Equally important is the finding that the screening of spatial cohorts in either category led to hardly any case detections.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%