Yohannes Mekonnen, Haile Mituku, Ghebreyesus Tedros A, Witten Karen H, Getachew Asefaw, Byass Peter, Lindsay Steve W
Mekelle University, Mekelle, Ethiopia.
Trop Med Int Health. 2005 Dec;10(12):1274-85. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2005.01512.x.
The development of irrigation schemes by dam construction has led to an increased risk of malaria in Tigray, Ethiopia. We carried out a pilot study near a microdam to assess whether environmental management could reduce malaria transmission by Anopheles arabiensis, the main vector in Ethiopia. The study took place in Deba village, close to a dam; Maisheru village, situated 3-4 km away from the dam, acted as a control. Baseline entomological and clinical data were collected in both villages during the first 12 months. Source reduction, involving filling, draining and shading of potential mosquito-breeding habitats was carried out by the community of Deba in the second year and routine surveillance continued in both villages during the second year. Anopheles arabiensis was highly anthropophilic (Human Blood Index=0.73), biting early in the night before people went to bed. The major breeding habitats associated with the dam were areas of seepage at the dam base (28%), leaking irrigation canals (16%), pools that formed along the bed of streams from the dam (13%), and man-made pools (12%). In the pre-intervention year, 5.9-7.2 times more adult vectors were found in the dam village compared with the control village. There was a 3.1% higher prevalence of an enlarged spleen in children under 10 years in the dam village than in the control village during the pre-intervention period, but no statistically significant difference was found in the incidence of falciparum malaria between the two villages during the same period. Source reduction was associated with a 49% (95% CI=46.6-50.0) relative reduction in An. arabiensis adults in the dam village compared with the pre-intervention period. There were very few cases of malaria during the intervention period in both villages making it impossible to judge whether malaria incidence had been reduced. These preliminary findings suggest that in areas of low intensity transmission community-led larval control may be a cheap and effective method of controlling malaria. Further, large-scale studies are needed to confirm these findings.
通过修建大坝来发展灌溉计划,增加了埃塞俄比亚提格雷地区疟疾的发病风险。我们在一座小型水坝附近开展了一项试点研究,以评估环境管理能否减少埃塞俄比亚主要病媒阿拉伯按蚊传播疟疾。该研究在靠近一座大坝的德巴村进行;距离大坝3 - 4公里的迈舍鲁村作为对照。在最初的12个月里,收集了两个村庄的基线昆虫学和临床数据。第二年,德巴村的社区开展了源头控制措施,包括填平、排干和遮蔽潜在的蚊虫滋生地,并且在第二年两个村庄都继续进行常规监测。阿拉伯按蚊具有高度嗜人性(人类血指数 = 0.73),在人们睡觉前的深夜叮咬。与大坝相关的主要滋生地是大坝底部的渗流区域(28%)、渗漏的灌溉水渠(16%)、大坝溪流河床形成的水洼(13%)以及人工水洼(12%)。在干预前的年份,大坝所在村庄发现的成年病媒比对照村庄多5.9 - 7.2倍。在干预前期,大坝所在村庄10岁以下儿童脾脏肿大的患病率比对照村庄高3.1%,但同期两个村庄间恶性疟的发病率没有统计学上的显著差异。与干预前相比,源头控制使大坝所在村庄的阿拉伯按蚊成虫数量相对减少了49%(95%可信区间 = 46.6 - 50.0)。两个村庄在干预期间疟疾病例都很少,因此无法判断疟疾发病率是否降低。这些初步研究结果表明,在低强度传播地区,由社区主导的幼虫控制可能是一种廉价且有效的疟疾控制方法。此外,需要开展大规模研究来证实这些发现。