Table 4.
P. vivax monoinfections by age, sex, and ethnic groups in Nouakchott, 2015–2020
Characteristics | PCR-positive P. vivax infections |
---|---|
Age group (years) | |
< 5 | 32 (14.8) |
5–9 | 18 (8.3) |
10–14 | 33 (15.3) |
15–19 | 23 (10.6) |
≥ 20 | 110 (51.0) |
Total | 216 |
Sex | |
Male | 128 (59.3) |
Female | 88 (40.7) |
Ethnic group | |
White Moors | 166 (76.8) |
Black Moors | 44 (20.4) |
Black Africans | 6 (2.8) |
Data are expressed as the number of PCR-confirmed P. vivax-infected patients and % in parentheses. There were a total of 216 PCR-confirmed P. vivax monoinfections
For statistical analysis, the age groups < 5, 5–9, 10–14, and 15–19 years old were pooled and considered as “children and adolescents” for comparison to “adults” (> 20 years old). The difference in the proportions of P. vivax monoinfections in children and adolescents (106/1073, 9.9%) and in adults (110/687, 16.0%) was statistically significant (P = 0.0002). The difference in the proportions of males and females with P. vivax was statistically significant (P = 0.0018)
The ethnic groups, Black Moors and black Africans, were pooled together into a single group and compared to white Moors. The difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.0765). The ethnic groups were also compared separately, 2 by 2. The difference in the proportion of white Moors infected with P. vivax monoinfection (9.4%) and that of black Africans with P. vivax monoinfection (6.1%) was statistically significant (P = 0.0305). There was no statistically significant difference between white and black Moors (P = 0.340)