1. Insecticide impregnation can restore the efficiency of torn bed nets and reduce man-vector contact in malaria endemic areas
- Author
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P. Carnevale, L. Diomandé, P. Bitsindou, and V. Robert
- Subjects
Insecticides ,Mosquito Control ,Toxicology ,REPULSIF ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Malaria transmission ,EVALUATION ,Environmental protection ,parasitic diseases ,Anopheles ,Nitriles ,Pyrethrins ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Malaria, Falciparum ,EFFICACITE ,Permethrin ,DOSAGE ,Bed nets ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,VECTEUR ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,CONTACT HOMME VECTEUR ,General Medicine ,PALUDISME ,PREVENTION SANITAIRE ,medicine.disease ,Insect Vectors ,PYRETHROIDE ,MORTALITE ,Infectious Diseases ,Deltamethrin ,chemistry ,INSECTICIDE CHIMIQUE ,Insecticide treatment ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Environmental science ,Parasitology ,MOUSTIQUAIRE IMPREGNEE ,Malaria ,medicine.drug ,Field conditions - Abstract
Three trials with torn bed nets impregnated with permethrin and deltamethrin were made under field conditions at the Soumousso Field Station and the Vallee du Kou rice-field area, both in Burkina Faso, and the Djoumouna fish pond area in the Congo Republic. Even a considerably torn correctly impregnated bed net could be an useful method for limiting human-anopheline contacts. But bed nets in poor condition, i.e. too little impregnated and too much torn, cannot protect the users against anopheline bites. Protection increases with insecticide concentration, but at a high dosage insecticide could have more a repellent than a killing effect. Therefore a balance has to be found for the optimum rate of insecticide treatment of bed nets to obtain a real reduction in malaria transmission and morbidity, in every epidemiological situation.
- Published
- 1992