Background: Thailand aimed to eliminate malaria by 2024, and as such is planning for future prevention of re-establishment in malaria free provinces. Understanding the receptivity of local areas to malaria allows the appropriate targeting of interventions. Current approaches to assessing receptivity involve collecting entomological data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Thailand is approaching local elimination of malaria in the eastern provinces. It has successfully reduced the number of cases over the past decade, but there are persistent transmission hot spots in and around forests. This study aimed to use data from the malaria surveillance system to describe the spatiotemporal trends of malaria in Northeast Thailand and fine-scale patterns in locally transmitted cases between 2011 and 2021.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The coverage of breast and cervical cancer screening has only slightly increased in the past decade in Thailand, and these cancers remain leading causes of death among women. This study identified socioeconomic and contextual factors contributing to the variation in screening uptake and coverage.
Materials And Methods: Secondary data from two nationally representative household surveys, the Health and Welfare Survey (HWS) 2007 and the Reproductive Health Survey (RHS) 2009 conducted by the National Statistical Office were used.
Objective: The incidence of breast cancer is the highest among female cancers in Thailand and has been steadily increasing during the past few decades. The present study aimed to determine uptake rates of breast cancer screening including breast self-examination (BSE), clinical breast examination (CBE), and mammography screening, and to identify enabling factors and barriers associated with screening uptake.
Material And Method: Secondary data from two population-based household surveys were used, the 2007 Health and Welfare Survey that comprised 18,474 women aged 20 years and older and the 2009 Reproductive Health Survey that comprised 26,951 women aged 30 to 59 years.