2014
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110807896
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The Historical Distribution of Main Malaria Foci in Spain as Related to Water Bodies

Abstract: The possible connectivity between the spatial distribution of water bodies suitable for vectors of malaria and endemic malaria foci in Southern Europe is still not well known. Spain was one of the last countries in Western Europe to be declared free of malaria by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1964. This study combines, by means of a spatial-temporal analysis, the historical data of patients and deceased with the distribution of water bodies where the disease-transmitting mosquitos proliferate. Therefo… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…These results, as well as previous works [11,45], indicate that the number of deaths does not show a homogeneous distribution in the country, but it is concentrated in certain regions, and within these in certain provinces. In this sense, using the mortality data at the provincial scale between 1916 and 1930, we can conclude that 77% of deaths by autochthonous malaria were concentrated in only 20% of the Spanish provinces.…”
Section: Autochthonous Malariasupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…These results, as well as previous works [11,45], indicate that the number of deaths does not show a homogeneous distribution in the country, but it is concentrated in certain regions, and within these in certain provinces. In this sense, using the mortality data at the provincial scale between 1916 and 1930, we can conclude that 77% of deaths by autochthonous malaria were concentrated in only 20% of the Spanish provinces.…”
Section: Autochthonous Malariasupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Between 1913 and 1916, there was an average rate of 20.6 deaths per 356 cases of illness, with a coefficient of determination R 2 = 0.79 (up to 0.90 only for 1913). With respect to the average in the whole of Spain, there was a remarkable mortality rate in the region of Extremadura and a lower mortality rate in the region of Levante for an equivalent morbidity [11].…”
Section: Autochthonous Malariamentioning
confidence: 79%
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