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Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model

The malaria vector landscape is dynamic and dependence on indoor control tools has drastically affected both species compositions and local mosquito biting behaviours. In the advent of spreading behavioural resilience and physiological resistance to insecticidal nets and house spray, approaches to t...

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Autor principal: Yakob, Laith
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5991820/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2015.12.001
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author Yakob, Laith
author_facet Yakob, Laith
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description The malaria vector landscape is dynamic and dependence on indoor control tools has drastically affected both species compositions and local mosquito biting behaviours. In the advent of spreading behavioural resilience and physiological resistance to insecticidal nets and house spray, approaches to target more zoophilic, outdoor-biting vectors are being sought with increased urgency. Endectocides are insecticides applied to hosts which are taken up by the vectors during biting, and recent field assessments have demonstrated favourable results of cattle treated with ivermectin, diflubenzuron, eprinomectin and fipronil. Models were constructed to account for the modern, diverse vector feeding behaviours and assess their role in shaping malaria transmission and control with cattle-treated endectocides. Efficacy of this novel approach to malaria control is shown to be strongly dependent not only on intrinsic host preferences of the vector but also on how this preference is augmented by variation in the encounter rates with alternative blood-hosts. Ecological scenarios are presented whereby endectocides used on cattle yield equivalent, and in some cases improved, efficacy over nets and spray in controlling malaria transmission. Interactions between mosquito biting behaviours and relative availabilities of alternative blood-host species have largely been neglected in malaria programmatic strategy but will increasingly underlie sustaining the successes of vector control initiatives.
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spelling pubmed-59918202018-07-09 Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model Yakob, Laith Parasite Epidemiol Control Article The malaria vector landscape is dynamic and dependence on indoor control tools has drastically affected both species compositions and local mosquito biting behaviours. In the advent of spreading behavioural resilience and physiological resistance to insecticidal nets and house spray, approaches to target more zoophilic, outdoor-biting vectors are being sought with increased urgency. Endectocides are insecticides applied to hosts which are taken up by the vectors during biting, and recent field assessments have demonstrated favourable results of cattle treated with ivermectin, diflubenzuron, eprinomectin and fipronil. Models were constructed to account for the modern, diverse vector feeding behaviours and assess their role in shaping malaria transmission and control with cattle-treated endectocides. Efficacy of this novel approach to malaria control is shown to be strongly dependent not only on intrinsic host preferences of the vector but also on how this preference is augmented by variation in the encounter rates with alternative blood-hosts. Ecological scenarios are presented whereby endectocides used on cattle yield equivalent, and in some cases improved, efficacy over nets and spray in controlling malaria transmission. Interactions between mosquito biting behaviours and relative availabilities of alternative blood-host species have largely been neglected in malaria programmatic strategy but will increasingly underlie sustaining the successes of vector control initiatives. Elsevier 2015-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC5991820/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2015.12.001 Text en © 2015 The Author http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Yakob, Laith
Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title_full Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title_fullStr Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title_full_unstemmed Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title_short Endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: A coupled entomological-epidemiological model
title_sort endectocide-treated cattle for malaria control: a coupled entomological-epidemiological model
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5991820/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2015.12.001
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