Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Mobile phone data can help combat malaria: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2014 12:32 PM
    Data from mobile phones that provide crucial information about movements of people within a country could be key to designing an effective malaria elimination programme, a promising study showed.
     
    An estimated 627,00 people died of malaria in 2012 as per the World Health Organisation (WHO).
     
    “Understanding the movement of people is crucial in eliminating malaria,” said Andy Tatem, a geographer at University of Southampton in Britain.
     
    “The study demonstrates that the rapid global proliferation of mobile phones now provides us with an opportunity to study the movement of people, using sample sizes running into millions,” Tatem added.
     
    This data, combined with disease case based mapping, can help us plan where and how to intervene, he explained.
     
    The study used anonymised mobile records to measure population movements within Namibia in Africa over the period of a year (2010-11).
     
    By combining this data with information about diagnosed cases of malaria, topography and climate, the researchers were able to identify geographical ‘hotspots’ of the disease and design targeted plans for its elimination.
     
    Twelve months of anonymised Call Data Records (CDRs) were provided by service provider Mobile Telecommunications Limited (MTC) to the researchers - representing nine billion communications from 1.19 million unique subscribers, around 52 percent of the population of Namibia.
     
    Aggregated movements of mobile users between urban areas and urban and rural areas were analysed in conjunction with data based on rapid diagnostic testing (RDT) of malaria and information on the climate, environment and topography of the country.
     
    The findings of the study helped the National Vector-borne Diseases Control Programme (NVDCP) in Namibia improve their targeting of malaria interventions to communities most at risk.
     
    Specifically they helped with the targeting of insecticide-treated bed net distributions in the Omusati, Kavango and Zambezi regions in 2013.
     
    The data would be useful for NVDCP to prepare for a large-scale net distribution in 2014 and deployment of community health workers, the researchers said.
     
    “The use of mobile phone data is one example of how new technologies are overcoming past problems of quantifying and gaining a better understanding of human movement patterns in relation to disease control,” Tatem said in the study that appeared in Malaria Journal.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond
    Do you often play games, check emails or respond to office calls on your cell phone while with family on a dinner? This phone addiction can damage your emotional bonding with kids soon.

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here
    Named Moss FM, the radio is designed by University of Cambridge biochemist Paolo Bombelli and London-based product designer Fabienne Felder.

    What? Plant-powered FM radio is here

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!
    Taken by NASA's MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft, it shows fertile areas from South America 

    Incredible! Earth goes red for better health!

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces
    The app now simulates the spreading and bleeding of the pigment onto the canvas - with dedicated properties for the virtual paper, the pigment, the brushes, the water and so on

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created
    The 3D-printed liver replicas, made of transparent material threaded with coloured arteries and veins, could help surgeons prevent complications while performing liver transplants or removing tumours, a path-breaking research shows.

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!
    Three cheers for wine lovers out there. Here comes a new machine that can turn water, grape concentrate, yeast and a finishing powder into wine in your kitchen in flat three days.

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!