Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2004)

Malaria Epidemics and Surveillance Systems in Canada

  • J. Dick MacLean,
  • Anne-Marie Demers,
  • Momar Ndao,
  • Evelyne Kokoskin,
  • Brian J. Ward,
  • Theresa W. Gyorkos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1007.030826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
pp. 1195 – 1201

Abstract

Read online

In the past decade, fluctuations in numbers of imported malaria cases have been seen in Canada. In 1997–1998, malaria case numbers more than doubled before returning to normal. This increase was seen in no other industrialized country. The Canadian federal malaria surveillance system collects insufficient data to interpret these fluctuations. Using local (sentinel), provincial, federal, and international malaria surveillance data, we evaluate and interpret these fluctuations. Several epidemics are described. With an ever-increasing immigrant and refugee population of tropical origin, improved surveillance will be necessary to guide public health prevention policy and practice. The Canadian experience is likely to be generalizable to other industrialized countries where malaria is a reportable disease within a passive surveillance system.

Keywords