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Application of mosquito—proof water containers in the reduction of dengue mosquito population in a dengue endemic province of Vietnam
Author(s) -
Hien Tran Van
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
asian pacific journal of tropical disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.208
H-Index - 33
ISSN - 2222-1808
DOI - 10.1016/s2222-1808(11)60063-7
Subject(s) - dengue fever , population , geography , aedes aegypti , toxicology , dengue hemorrhagic fever , mosquito control , cluster (spacecraft) , socioeconomics , dengue virus , environmental health , larva , biology , ecology , medicine , virology , sociology , malaria , immunology , computer science , programming language
Objective: To evaluate the application of dengue mosquito-proof water containers in the\udreduction of dengue mosquito population (both adult and larvae) and the acceptance and\udsatisfaction of community in new containers usage. Methods: A community intervention was\udcarried out from July-2008 to October-2009 in Dong Thanh commune, Can Giuoc district, Long\udAn province, Vietnam. A cluster of 100 households that has a relative separate position from\udsurrounding areas were supplied with mosquito-proof water containers, every household with two\udcontainers installed under the roof-gutters; and another cluster of households in another hamlet\udof the same commune used normal water containers. Evaluation of the changes in Aedes aegypti\ud(A. aegypti) population and usage of new water containers were conducted quarterly. Assessment\udof the acceptance and satisfaction of community was done by the end of the project. Results: The\udnumber of larvae per concrete tank in the intervention area were lower than those in the control\udarea in most survey rounds with statistic significance in the first, second and fourth surveys (P <\ud0.05). The number of larvae per new tank were lower than those per jars in the intervention site\udwith statistic significance from the second to fifth surveys (P < 0.01, P < 0.001, P < 0.01 and P < 0.05\udrespectively). However, with the presence of old containers, vector indices did not change in the\udintervention area. More than 94 percent households kept their containers tightly covered with two\udnets and used their new containers by taps in all the survey rounds. Average of times of cleaning\udnew water containers during three months were small, changing from 0.40 to 0.80 times. Number\udof old jars decreased regularly from means of 5.3 to 2.24 by survey rounds and the number in the\udfifth suvey were statistically lower than in the second survey (P < 0.001). 100 percent households\udaccepted the new containers and 96 percent households said they had ability to repair a broken\udnets/tapa or their materials. Conclusions: New containers prevented the development of A.\udaegypti mosquitos better than the same normal concrete containers and jars with statistic\udsignificance. Most households accepted, satisfied and used new containers in correct way and\udthey could maintain new containers by themselves. However, the continuance of use of old water\udcontainers affected on the entomological indices

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