Temporal and climatic drivers of uncomplicated malaria in Ghana: A Regional Generalised Additive Model analysis

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Abstract

Background

Malaria remains a major public health challenge in Ghana, despite recent reductions in cases due to various interventions. The endemicity of the disease varies across regions, influenced by diverse seasonal and temporal factors that support mosquito proliferation and malaria cases. This study used a Generalised Additive Models to explore the impact of weather conditions on malaria cases in Ghana.

Methods

Generalised Additive Models were used to examine the nonlinear effects of weather conditions on malaria cases. Monthly aggregated malaria cases from the District Health Information Management System II and average monthly rainfall and temperature data from the Ghana Meteorological Agency were analysed, covering 2012 to 2023. Regional Generalised Additive Models incorporating weather variables were developed, fitted, and validated against observed data using model diagnostics to identify the most suitable model for each region.

Results

The analysis revealed complex temporal patterns in malaria cases across Ghana, influenced by seasonal and long-term trends. Regions constituting the Coastal and Transitional Forest zones exhibited bimodal peak malaria seasons, while the Guinea Savannah showed a unimodal peak. Significant interactions between rainfall and temperature were identified, particularly in the Eastern region, where higher rainfall combined with temperatures around 27–28 °C were associated with higher malaria cases, reflecting the complex and region-specific nature of meteorological influences.

Conclusions

The findings point to the dynamic and heterogeneous nature of malaria caseloads in Ghana, emphasising the need for region-specific control strategies tailored to local climatic conditions. A key recommendation is the systematic integration of meteorological data into the National Malaria Data Repository to enable continuous monitoring of climatic influences and support timely, evidence-based intervention decisions. Future research should incorporate socio-economic factors, intervention coverage data, vector surveillance, and demographic characteristics into mathematical modelling frameworks for a more comprehensive understanding of malaria cases in Ghana.

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