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Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala

BACKGROUND: In view of the epidemiological expansion of dengue worldwide and the availability of new tools and strategies particularly for controlling the primary dengue vector Aedes aegypti, an intervention study was set up to test the efficacy, cost and feasibility of a combined approach of insect...

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Autores principales: Rizzo, Nidia, Gramajo, Rodrigo, Escobar, Maria Cabrera, Arana, Byron, Kroeger, Axel, Manrique-Saide, Pablo, Petzold, Max
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3533994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-931
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author Rizzo, Nidia
Gramajo, Rodrigo
Escobar, Maria Cabrera
Arana, Byron
Kroeger, Axel
Manrique-Saide, Pablo
Petzold, Max
author_facet Rizzo, Nidia
Gramajo, Rodrigo
Escobar, Maria Cabrera
Arana, Byron
Kroeger, Axel
Manrique-Saide, Pablo
Petzold, Max
author_sort Rizzo, Nidia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In view of the epidemiological expansion of dengue worldwide and the availability of new tools and strategies particularly for controlling the primary dengue vector Aedes aegypti, an intervention study was set up to test the efficacy, cost and feasibility of a combined approach of insecticide treated materials (ITMs) alone and in combination with appropriate targeted interventions of the most productive vector breeding-sites. METHODS: The study was conducted as a cluster randomized community trial using “reduction of the vector population” as the main outcome variable. The trial had two arms: 10 intervention clusters (neighborhoods) and 10 control clusters in the town of Poptun Guatemala. Activities included entomological assessments (characteristics of breeding-sites, pupal productivity, Stegomyia indices) at baseline, 6 weeks after the first intervention (coverage of window and exterior doorways made of PermaNet 2.0 netting, factory treated with deltamethrin at 55 mg/m(2), and of 200 L drums with similar treated material) and 6 weeks after the second intervention (combination of treated materials and other suitable interventions targeting productive breeding-sites i.e larviciding with Temephos, elimination etc.). The second intervention took place 17 months after the first intervention. The insecticide residual activity and the insecticidal content were also studied at different intervals. Additionally, information about demographic characteristics, cost of the intervention, coverage of houses protected and satisfaction in the population with the interventions was collected. RESULTS: At baseline (during the dry season) a variety of productive container types for Aedes pupae were identified: various container types holding >20 L, 200 L drums, washbasins and buckets (producing 83.7% of all pupae). After covering 100% of windows and exterior doorways and a small number of drums (where the commercial cover could be fixed) in 970 study households, tropical rains occurred in the area and lead to an increase of the vector population, more pronounced (but statistically not significant) in the control arm than in the intervention arm. In the second intervention (17 months later and six weeks after implementing the second intervention) the combined approach of ITMs and a combination of appropriate interventions against productive containers (Temephos in >200 L water drums, elimination of small discarded tins and bottles) lead to significant differences on reductions of the total number of pupae (P = 0.04) and the House index (P = 0.01) between intervention and control clusters, and to borderline differences on reductions of the Pupae per Person and Breteau indices (P = 0.05). The insecticide residual activity on treated curtains was high until month 18 but the chemical concentration showed a high variability. The cost per house protected with treated curtains and drum covers and targeting productive breeding-sites of the dengue vector was $ 5.31 USD. The acceptance of the measure was generally high, particularly in families who had experienced dengue. CONCLUSION: Even under difficult environmental conditions (open houses, tropical rainfall, challenging container types mainly in the peridomestic environment) the combination of insecticide treated curtains and to a less extent drum covers and interventions targeting the productive container types can reduce the dengue vector population significantly.
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spelling pubmed-35339942013-01-07 Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala Rizzo, Nidia Gramajo, Rodrigo Escobar, Maria Cabrera Arana, Byron Kroeger, Axel Manrique-Saide, Pablo Petzold, Max BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: In view of the epidemiological expansion of dengue worldwide and the availability of new tools and strategies particularly for controlling the primary dengue vector Aedes aegypti, an intervention study was set up to test the efficacy, cost and feasibility of a combined approach of insecticide treated materials (ITMs) alone and in combination with appropriate targeted interventions of the most productive vector breeding-sites. METHODS: The study was conducted as a cluster randomized community trial using “reduction of the vector population” as the main outcome variable. The trial had two arms: 10 intervention clusters (neighborhoods) and 10 control clusters in the town of Poptun Guatemala. Activities included entomological assessments (characteristics of breeding-sites, pupal productivity, Stegomyia indices) at baseline, 6 weeks after the first intervention (coverage of window and exterior doorways made of PermaNet 2.0 netting, factory treated with deltamethrin at 55 mg/m(2), and of 200 L drums with similar treated material) and 6 weeks after the second intervention (combination of treated materials and other suitable interventions targeting productive breeding-sites i.e larviciding with Temephos, elimination etc.). The second intervention took place 17 months after the first intervention. The insecticide residual activity and the insecticidal content were also studied at different intervals. Additionally, information about demographic characteristics, cost of the intervention, coverage of houses protected and satisfaction in the population with the interventions was collected. RESULTS: At baseline (during the dry season) a variety of productive container types for Aedes pupae were identified: various container types holding >20 L, 200 L drums, washbasins and buckets (producing 83.7% of all pupae). After covering 100% of windows and exterior doorways and a small number of drums (where the commercial cover could be fixed) in 970 study households, tropical rains occurred in the area and lead to an increase of the vector population, more pronounced (but statistically not significant) in the control arm than in the intervention arm. In the second intervention (17 months later and six weeks after implementing the second intervention) the combined approach of ITMs and a combination of appropriate interventions against productive containers (Temephos in >200 L water drums, elimination of small discarded tins and bottles) lead to significant differences on reductions of the total number of pupae (P = 0.04) and the House index (P = 0.01) between intervention and control clusters, and to borderline differences on reductions of the Pupae per Person and Breteau indices (P = 0.05). The insecticide residual activity on treated curtains was high until month 18 but the chemical concentration showed a high variability. The cost per house protected with treated curtains and drum covers and targeting productive breeding-sites of the dengue vector was $ 5.31 USD. The acceptance of the measure was generally high, particularly in families who had experienced dengue. CONCLUSION: Even under difficult environmental conditions (open houses, tropical rainfall, challenging container types mainly in the peridomestic environment) the combination of insecticide treated curtains and to a less extent drum covers and interventions targeting the productive container types can reduce the dengue vector population significantly. BioMed Central 2012-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3533994/ /pubmed/23110515 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-931 Text en Copyright ©2012 Rizzo et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rizzo, Nidia
Gramajo, Rodrigo
Escobar, Maria Cabrera
Arana, Byron
Kroeger, Axel
Manrique-Saide, Pablo
Petzold, Max
Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title_full Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title_fullStr Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title_full_unstemmed Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title_short Dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in Guatemala
title_sort dengue vector management using insecticide treated materials and targeted interventions on productive breeding-sites in guatemala
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3533994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-931
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