Malaria's indirect contribution to all-cause mortality in the Andaman Islands during the colonial era

GD Shanks, SI Hay, DJ Bradley - The Lancet infectious diseases, 2008 - thelancet.com
GD Shanks, SI Hay, DJ Bradley
The Lancet infectious diseases, 2008thelancet.com
Malaria has a substantial secondary effect on other causes of mortality. From the 19th
century, malaria epidemics in the Andaman Islands' penal colony were initiated by the
brackish swamp-breeding malaria vector Anopheles sundaicus and fuelled by the
importation of new prisoners. Malaria was a major determinant of the highly variable all-
cause mortality rate (correlation coefficient r 2= 0· 60, n= 68, p< 0· 0001) from 1872 to 1939.
Directly attributed malaria mortality based on post-mortem examinations rarely exceeded …
Summary
Malaria has a substantial secondary effect on other causes of mortality. From the 19th century, malaria epidemics in the Andaman Islands' penal colony were initiated by the brackish swamp-breeding malaria vector Anopheles sundaicus and fuelled by the importation of new prisoners. Malaria was a major determinant of the highly variable all-cause mortality rate (correlation coefficient r2=0·60, n=68, p<0·0001) from 1872 to 1939. Directly attributed malaria mortality based on post-mortem examinations rarely exceeded one-fifth of total mortality. Infectious diseases such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, dysentery, and diarrhoea, which combined with malaria made up the majority of all-cause mortality, were positively correlated with malaria incidence over several decades. Deaths secondary to malaria (indirect malaria mortality) were at least as great as mortality directly attributed to malaria infections.
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