Antenatal malaria parasitaemia and haemoglobin profile of pregnant mothers in Awka, Anambra State, Southeast Nigeria.

2009 
2 Abstract: Three hundred and two women comprising 242 pregnant women attending antenatal clinic and 60 non pregnant women that served as control group, were tested for malaria parasites using Giemsa stained thick films. The haemoglobin concentration of the mothers were also tested and matched with their infection status. The findings show that malaria parasitaemia and intensity are dependent on pregnancy and parity of pregnancy (p < 0.05). It demonstrated that anaemia is a common feature of malaria infection, more severe during pregnancy especially in the first pregnancy. There was a downward gradation in the prevalence of low haemoglobin levels from primiparae to the control group in both infected and uninfected populations. Over 70% of primigravid mothers, 45% of the multiparae and only 22% of the control group recorded haemoglobin levels lower than the World Health Organization benchmark (11.0g/dl). Anaemia was therefore dependent on infection status, pregnancy status and parity of pregnancy (p <0.05). The effects of malaria and its clinical features (especially anaemia) on the mother and foetus was again re-stressed with emphasis on availability, affordability and sustainability of malaria control efforts especially for the most vulnerable populations. The study will be of immense value as a public health tool for planning, delivery, monitoring and evaluation of interventions.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []