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High vector diversity and malaria transmission dynamics in five sentinel sites in Cameroon
by
Njeambosay, Boris
, Eyisap, Wolfgang Ekoko
, Fondjo, Etienne
, Chabi, Joseph
, Tchouine, Frederic
, Mandeng, Elysée
, Tedjou, Armel
, Tene-Fossog, Billy
, Ambrose, Kelley
, Binyang, Jerome Achille
, Patchoke, Salomon
, Carlson, Jenny
, Nchoutpouen, Elysée
, Tchouakui, Magellan
, Achu, Dorothy
, Ndo, Cyrille
, Toto, Jean-Claude
, Zohdy, Sarah
, Hedje, Judith
, Ngomdjum, Raymond Tabue
, Elanga-Ndille, Emmanuel
, Kopya, Edmond
, Zeukeug, Francis
, Menze, Benjamin
, Kouambeng, Celestin
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Cameroon
/ Cameroon - epidemiology
/ Community composition
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insecticides
/ Light traps
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Morbidity
/ Morphology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Outdoors
/ Ovaries
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrins
/ Species composition
/ Sporozoites
/ Towards malaria elimination
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector diversity
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectorial capacity
/ Vectors
/ Womens health
2023
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High vector diversity and malaria transmission dynamics in five sentinel sites in Cameroon
by
Njeambosay, Boris
, Eyisap, Wolfgang Ekoko
, Fondjo, Etienne
, Chabi, Joseph
, Tchouine, Frederic
, Mandeng, Elysée
, Tedjou, Armel
, Tene-Fossog, Billy
, Ambrose, Kelley
, Binyang, Jerome Achille
, Patchoke, Salomon
, Carlson, Jenny
, Nchoutpouen, Elysée
, Tchouakui, Magellan
, Achu, Dorothy
, Ndo, Cyrille
, Toto, Jean-Claude
, Zohdy, Sarah
, Hedje, Judith
, Ngomdjum, Raymond Tabue
, Elanga-Ndille, Emmanuel
, Kopya, Edmond
, Zeukeug, Francis
, Menze, Benjamin
, Kouambeng, Celestin
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Cameroon
/ Cameroon - epidemiology
/ Community composition
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insecticides
/ Light traps
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Morbidity
/ Morphology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Outdoors
/ Ovaries
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrins
/ Species composition
/ Sporozoites
/ Towards malaria elimination
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector diversity
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectorial capacity
/ Vectors
/ Womens health
2023
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
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High vector diversity and malaria transmission dynamics in five sentinel sites in Cameroon
by
Njeambosay, Boris
, Eyisap, Wolfgang Ekoko
, Fondjo, Etienne
, Chabi, Joseph
, Tchouine, Frederic
, Mandeng, Elysée
, Tedjou, Armel
, Tene-Fossog, Billy
, Ambrose, Kelley
, Binyang, Jerome Achille
, Patchoke, Salomon
, Carlson, Jenny
, Nchoutpouen, Elysée
, Tchouakui, Magellan
, Achu, Dorothy
, Ndo, Cyrille
, Toto, Jean-Claude
, Zohdy, Sarah
, Hedje, Judith
, Ngomdjum, Raymond Tabue
, Elanga-Ndille, Emmanuel
, Kopya, Edmond
, Zeukeug, Francis
, Menze, Benjamin
, Kouambeng, Celestin
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Cameroon
/ Cameroon - epidemiology
/ Community composition
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insecticides
/ Light traps
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Morbidity
/ Morphology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Outdoors
/ Ovaries
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrins
/ Species composition
/ Sporozoites
/ Towards malaria elimination
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector diversity
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectorial capacity
/ Vectors
/ Womens health
2023
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High vector diversity and malaria transmission dynamics in five sentinel sites in Cameroon
Journal Article
High vector diversity and malaria transmission dynamics in five sentinel sites in Cameroon
2023
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Overview
Background
Malaria remains one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality in Cameroon. To inform vector control intervention decision making, malaria vector surveillance was conducted monthly from October 2018 to September 2020 in five selected sentinel sites (Gounougou and Simatou in the North, and Bonabéri, Mangoum and Nyabessang in the South).
Methods
Human landing catches (HLCs), U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) light traps, and pyrethrum spray catches (PSCs) were used to assess vector density, species composition, human biting rate (HBR), endophagic index, indoor resting density (IRD), parity, sporozoite infection rates, entomological inoculation rate (EIR), and
Anopheles
vectorial capacity.
Results
A total of 139,322
Anopheles
mosquitoes from 18 species (or 21 including identified sub-species) were collected across all sites. Out of the 18 species, 12 were malaria vectors including
Anopheles gambiae sensu lato
(s.l.),
Anopheles funestus
s.l..,
Anopheles nili
,
Anopheles moucheti
,
Anopheles paludis
,
Anopheles demeilloni
,
Anopheles. pharoensis
,
Anopheles ziemanni
,
Anopheles multicinctus
,
Anopheles tenebrosus
,
Anopheles rufipes
, and
Anopheles marshallii
.
Anopheles gambiae
s.l. remains the major malaria vector (71% of the total
Anopheles
) collected, though
An. moucheti
and
An. paludis
had the highest sporozoite rates in Nyabessang. The mean indoor HBR of
Anopheles
ranged from 11.0 bites/human/night (b/h/n) in Bonabéri to 104.0 b/h/n in Simatou, while outdoors, it varied from 24.2 b/h/n in Mangoum to 98.7 b/h/n in Simatou.
Anopheles gambiae s.l
. and
An. moucheti
were actively biting until at least 8:00 a.m. The mean
Anopheles
IRD was 17.1 females/room, and the parity rate was 68.9%. The mean EIRs for each site were 55.4 infective bites/human/month (ib/h/m) in Gounougou, 99.0 ib/h/m in Simatou, 51.2 ib/h/m in Mangoum, 24.4 ib/h/m in Nyabessang, and 18.1 ib/h/m in Bonabéri.
Anopheles gambiae
s.l. was confirmed as the main malaria vector with the highest vectorial capacity in all sites based on sporozoite rate, except in Nyabessang.
Conclusion
These findings highlight the high malaria transmission occurring in Cameroon and will support the National Malaria Control Program to design evidence-based malaria vector control strategies, and deployment of effective and integrated vector control interventions to reduce malaria transmission and burden in Cameroon, where several
Anopheles
species could potentially maintain year-round transmission.
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