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A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya

BACKGROUND: About 30 million insecticide treated mosquito nets have been distributed in Kenya since 2001 and ownership is approaching full coverage. As a consequence of this achievement, Kenya is faced with the challenge of disposing old mosquito nets that are no longer in use. The study aimed at in...

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Autores principales: Kibe, Lydiah W., Kamau, Anne W., Gachigi, John K., Habluetzel, Annette, Mbogo, Charles M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6616035/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31293898
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author Kibe, Lydiah W.
Kamau, Anne W.
Gachigi, John K.
Habluetzel, Annette
Mbogo, Charles M.
author_facet Kibe, Lydiah W.
Kamau, Anne W.
Gachigi, John K.
Habluetzel, Annette
Mbogo, Charles M.
author_sort Kibe, Lydiah W.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: About 30 million insecticide treated mosquito nets have been distributed in Kenya since 2001 and ownership is approaching full coverage. As a consequence of this achievement, Kenya is faced with the challenge of disposing old mosquito nets that are no longer in use. The study aimed at investigating ways of disposal and re-use of old and torn nets by end users. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A formative study was conducted in the former Malindi District, which is comprised of Malindi and Magarini sub-counties of Kilifi County in Coastal Kenya. A total of 6 Focus Group Discussions, 10 Key Informant Interviews and 9 transect walks/drives were undertaken. Data from the different sources were analysed separately and triangulated for similarities and differences. RESULTS: There were variations in disposal and re-use of old nets between urban and rural or peri-urban residents. In all settings, people adopted innovative and beneficial ways of re-using old, expired nets, and those that were damaged beyond repair. Common causes of damage were fire, children, domestic animals sharing the sleeping room and friction from the bed poles while hanging or tacking it in under a sleeping mat. Re-use was most prominent in farming activities (78%) and less to for use in mosquito control, like window screening (15%). The remaining 8% was related to making ropes, swings, footballs, goal posts and fishing nets. Advantageous texture and nature of the netting material, perceived economic benefit and lack of guidelines for disposal were the main reasons cited by residents for re-using old nets. CONCLUSIONS: It is important that re-use and disposal of old mosquito nets is distinguished from misuse of newly distributed mosquito nets. Alternative uses of old nets as opposed to misuse of new nets was found to be common in our study.
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spelling pubmed-66160352019-07-10 A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya Kibe, Lydiah W. Kamau, Anne W. Gachigi, John K. Habluetzel, Annette Mbogo, Charles M. Malariaworld J Article BACKGROUND: About 30 million insecticide treated mosquito nets have been distributed in Kenya since 2001 and ownership is approaching full coverage. As a consequence of this achievement, Kenya is faced with the challenge of disposing old mosquito nets that are no longer in use. The study aimed at investigating ways of disposal and re-use of old and torn nets by end users. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A formative study was conducted in the former Malindi District, which is comprised of Malindi and Magarini sub-counties of Kilifi County in Coastal Kenya. A total of 6 Focus Group Discussions, 10 Key Informant Interviews and 9 transect walks/drives were undertaken. Data from the different sources were analysed separately and triangulated for similarities and differences. RESULTS: There were variations in disposal and re-use of old nets between urban and rural or peri-urban residents. In all settings, people adopted innovative and beneficial ways of re-using old, expired nets, and those that were damaged beyond repair. Common causes of damage were fire, children, domestic animals sharing the sleeping room and friction from the bed poles while hanging or tacking it in under a sleeping mat. Re-use was most prominent in farming activities (78%) and less to for use in mosquito control, like window screening (15%). The remaining 8% was related to making ropes, swings, footballs, goal posts and fishing nets. Advantageous texture and nature of the netting material, perceived economic benefit and lack of guidelines for disposal were the main reasons cited by residents for re-using old nets. CONCLUSIONS: It is important that re-use and disposal of old mosquito nets is distinguished from misuse of newly distributed mosquito nets. Alternative uses of old nets as opposed to misuse of new nets was found to be common in our study. 2019-07-03 2015-06-29 /pmc/articles/PMC6616035/ /pubmed/31293898 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kibe, Lydiah W.
Kamau, Anne W.
Gachigi, John K.
Habluetzel, Annette
Mbogo, Charles M.
A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title_full A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title_fullStr A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title_short A formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in Malindi, Kenya
title_sort formative study of disposal and re-use of old mosquito nets by communities in malindi, kenya
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6616035/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31293898
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