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Impact of vector control interventions on malaria transmission intensity, outdoor vector biting rates and Anopheles mosquito species composition in Tororo, Uganda
by
Musiime, Alex K.
, Smith, David L.
, Kamya, Moses R.
, Lindsay, Steve W.
, Arinaitwe, Emmanuel
, Dorsey, Grant
, Rek, John
, Nankabirwa, Joaniter I.
, Conrad, Melissa D.
, Egonyu, James P.
, Akol, Anne M.
, Staedke, Sarah G.
, Kilama, Maxwell
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - physiology
/ Aquatic insects
/ Artemisinin
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Bites (Injuries)
/ Biting
/ Biting rates
/ Community composition
/ Control
/ Culicidae
/ Deployment
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ DNA
/ Endemic species
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Females
/ Households
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Indoor residual spraying
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insect Bites and Stings - etiology
/ Insecticides
/ Long-lasting insecticide nets
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Malaria vector
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Control
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Species composition
/ Species identification
/ Sporozoites
/ Studies
/ Surgery
/ Transmission
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Uganda
/ Vector-borne diseases
2019
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Impact of vector control interventions on malaria transmission intensity, outdoor vector biting rates and Anopheles mosquito species composition in Tororo, Uganda
by
Musiime, Alex K.
, Smith, David L.
, Kamya, Moses R.
, Lindsay, Steve W.
, Arinaitwe, Emmanuel
, Dorsey, Grant
, Rek, John
, Nankabirwa, Joaniter I.
, Conrad, Melissa D.
, Egonyu, James P.
, Akol, Anne M.
, Staedke, Sarah G.
, Kilama, Maxwell
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - physiology
/ Aquatic insects
/ Artemisinin
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Bites (Injuries)
/ Biting
/ Biting rates
/ Community composition
/ Control
/ Culicidae
/ Deployment
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ DNA
/ Endemic species
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Females
/ Households
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Indoor residual spraying
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insect Bites and Stings - etiology
/ Insecticides
/ Long-lasting insecticide nets
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Malaria vector
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Control
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Species composition
/ Species identification
/ Sporozoites
/ Studies
/ Surgery
/ Transmission
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Uganda
/ Vector-borne diseases
2019
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Impact of vector control interventions on malaria transmission intensity, outdoor vector biting rates and Anopheles mosquito species composition in Tororo, Uganda
by
Musiime, Alex K.
, Smith, David L.
, Kamya, Moses R.
, Lindsay, Steve W.
, Arinaitwe, Emmanuel
, Dorsey, Grant
, Rek, John
, Nankabirwa, Joaniter I.
, Conrad, Melissa D.
, Egonyu, James P.
, Akol, Anne M.
, Staedke, Sarah G.
, Kilama, Maxwell
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - physiology
/ Aquatic insects
/ Artemisinin
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Bites (Injuries)
/ Biting
/ Biting rates
/ Community composition
/ Control
/ Culicidae
/ Deployment
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ DNA
/ Endemic species
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Females
/ Households
/ Houses
/ Human diseases
/ Indoor residual spraying
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insect Bites and Stings - etiology
/ Insecticides
/ Long-lasting insecticide nets
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Malaria vector
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Control
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Species composition
/ Species identification
/ Sporozoites
/ Studies
/ Surgery
/ Transmission
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Uganda
/ Vector-borne diseases
2019
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Impact of vector control interventions on malaria transmission intensity, outdoor vector biting rates and Anopheles mosquito species composition in Tororo, Uganda
Journal Article
Impact of vector control interventions on malaria transmission intensity, outdoor vector biting rates and Anopheles mosquito species composition in Tororo, Uganda
2019
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Overview
Background
Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying of insecticide (IRS) are widely recommended for the prevention of malaria in endemic regions. Data from human landing catches provide information on the impact of vector control on vector populations. Here, malaria transmission indoors and outdoors, before and after mass deployment of LLINs and IRS in Uganda was compared.
Methods
The study took place in Tororo district, a historically high transmission area where universal LLIN distribution was conducted in November 2013 and May 2017 and 6 rounds of IRS implemented from December 2014 to July 2018. Human landing catches were performed in 8 houses monthly from October 2011 to September 2012 (pre-intervention period) and every 4 weeks from November 2017 to October 2018 (post-intervention period). Mosquitoes were collected outdoors from 18:00 to 22:00 h and indoors from 18:00 to 06:00 h. Female
Anopheles
were tested for the presence of
Plasmodium falciparum
sporozoites and species identification performed using gross dissection and polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
Results
The interventions were associated with a decline in human biting rate from 19.6 to 2.3 female
Anopheles
mosquitoes per house per night (p < 0.001) and annual entomological inoculation rate from 129 to 0 infective bites per person per year (p < 0.001). The proportion of mosquitoes collected outdoors increased from 11.6 to 49.4% (p < 0.001). Prior to the interventions the predominant species was
Anopheles gambiae
sensu stricto (s.s.), which comprised an estimated 76.7% of mosquitoes. Following the interventions, the predominant species was
Anopheles arabiensis,
which comprised 99.5% of mosquitoes, with almost complete elimination of
An. gambiae
s.s. (0.5%).
Conclusions
Mass distribution of LLINs and 6 rounds of IRS dramatically decreased vector density and sporozoite rate resulting in a marked reduction in malaria transmission intensity in a historically high transmission site in Uganda. These changes were accompanied by a shift in vector species from
An. gambiae
s.s. to
An. arabiensis
and a relative increase in outdoor biting.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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