Mabaso Musawenkosi L H, Sharp Brian, Lengeler Christian
Malaria Research Programme, Medical Research Council, Durban, South Africa.
Trop Med Int Health. 2004 Aug;9(8):846-56. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2004.01263.x.
Indoor residual house-spraying (IRS) mainly with dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) was the principal method by which malaria was eradicated or greatly reduced in many countries in the world between the 1940s and 1960s. In sub-Saharan Africa early malarial eradication pilot projects also showed that malaria is highly responsive to vector control by IRS but transmission could not be interrupted in the endemic tropical and lowland areas. As a result IRS was not taken to scale in most endemic areas of the continent with the exception of southern Africa and some island countries such as Reunion, Mayotte, Zanzibar, Cape Verde and Sao Tome. In southern Africa large-scale malarial control operations based on IRS with DDT and benzene hexachloride (BHC) were initiated in a number of countries to varying degrees. The objective of this review was to investigate the malarial situation before and after the introduction of indoor residual insecticide spraying in South Africa, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique using historical malarial data and related information collected from National Malaria Control Programmes, national archives and libraries, as well as academic institutions in the respective countries. Immediately after the inception of IRS with insecticides, dramatic reductions in malaria and its vectors were recorded. Countries that developed National Malaria Control Programmes during this phase and had built up human and organizational resources made significant advances towards malarial control. Malaria was reduced from hyper- to meso-endemicity and from meso- to hypo-endemicity and in certain instances to complete eradication. Data are presented on the effectiveness of IRS as a malarial control tool in six southern African countries. Recent trends in and challenges to malarial control in the region are also discussed.
室内滞留喷洒(IRS)主要使用滴滴涕(DDT),是20世纪40年代至60年代世界上许多国家根除疟疾或大幅减少疟疾的主要方法。在撒哈拉以南非洲,早期的疟疾根除试点项目也表明,疟疾对室内滞留喷洒的病媒控制反应高度敏感,但在热带流行和低地地区,传播无法被阻断。因此,除了南部非洲以及留尼汪、马约特、桑给巴尔、佛得角和圣多美等一些岛国之外,室内滞留喷洒在非洲大陆的大多数流行地区并未得到推广。在南部非洲,一些国家不同程度地开展了基于使用滴滴涕和六氯环己烷(BHC)进行室内滞留喷洒的大规模疟疾控制行动。本综述的目的是利用历史疟疾数据以及从南非、斯威士兰、博茨瓦纳、纳米比亚、津巴布韦和莫桑比克等国的国家疟疾控制规划、国家档案馆和图书馆以及学术机构收集的相关信息,调查在这些国家引入室内滞留杀虫剂喷洒前后的疟疾情况。在开始使用杀虫剂进行室内滞留喷洒后,疟疾及其病媒数量立即大幅减少。在这一阶段制定了国家疟疾控制规划并积累了人力和组织资源的国家,在疟疾控制方面取得了重大进展。疟疾从高度流行降至中度流行,从中度流行降至低度流行,在某些情况下甚至完全根除。文中列出了室内滞留喷洒作为南部非洲六个国家疟疾控制工具的有效性数据。还讨论了该地区疟疾控制的最新趋势和挑战。