London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Malar J. 2010 Jul 22;9:211. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-211.
Household ownership of insecticide-treated mosquito nets (ITNs) is increasing, and coverage targets have been revised to address universal coverage with ITNs. However, many households do not have enough nets to cover everyone, and the nets available vary in physical condition and insecticide treatment status. Since 2004, the Government of Tanzania has been implementing the Tanzania National Voucher Scheme (TNVS), which distributes vouchers for ITNs through antenatal clinics to target pregnant women and their infants. This analysis aimed to determine the following: (1) coverage patterns of bed nets within households according to physical condition and treatment status; (2) who might be at risk if mosquitoes were diverted from occupants of untreated nets to those not using nets? (3) the degree to which those at highest risk of malaria use the most protective nets.
Data from the 2006 TNVS household survey were analysed to assess within-household distribution of net use. The associations between net characteristics and net user were also evaluated. Multivariate analysis was applied to the relationship between the number of holes per net and user characteristics while adjusting for confounders.
In households with a net:person ratio better than 1:4 (one net for every four household members), more than 80% of the people in such households reported using a net the previous night. ITNs were most likely to be used by infants, young children (1-4 y), and women of childbearing age; they were least likely to be used by older women (>or=50 y), older children (5-14 y), and adult men. The nets used by infants and women of childbearing age were in better-than-average physical condition; the nets used by older women and older children were in worse-than-average condition; while young children and adult men used nets in intermediate (average) condition. When adjusted for confounders, the nets used by young and older children had more holes than nets used by infants.
Infants and other vulnerable groups were most likely to sleep under the most protective nets. Nevertheless, more communication efforts are needed to increase use of intact ITNs within households for children. Further research is necessary to fully understand motivations influencing within-household net distribution.
家用驱虫蚊帐(ITN)的拥有率正在提高,覆盖目标也已修订为普及 ITN。但是,许多家庭没有足够的蚊帐来覆盖每个人,而且现有的蚊帐在物理状况和杀虫剂处理状态方面存在差异。自 2004 年以来,坦桑尼亚政府一直在实施坦桑尼亚国家代金券计划(TNVS),通过产前诊所向孕妇及其婴儿分发 ITN 代金券。本分析旨在确定以下内容:(1)根据物理状况和处理状况,家庭内蚊帐的覆盖模式;(2)如果蚊子从未处理过的蚊帐中的人转移到不使用蚊帐的人身上,谁可能面临风险?(3)疟疾风险最高的人群使用最具保护力的蚊帐的程度。
对 2006 年 TNVS 家庭调查的数据进行了分析,以评估家庭内蚊帐的使用分布。还评估了网的特征与网使用者之间的关系。在调整混杂因素的情况下,应用多元分析评估了每蚊帐孔数与使用者特征之间的关系。
在网:人比例大于 1:4(每四个家庭成员一个网)的家庭中,超过 80%的家庭报告前一天晚上使用了蚊帐。 ITN 最有可能被婴儿、幼儿(1-4 岁)和育龄妇女使用;他们最不可能被年龄较大的妇女(≥50 岁)、年龄较大的儿童(5-14 岁)和成年男子使用。婴儿和育龄妇女使用的蚊帐状况良好;年龄较大的妇女和年龄较大的儿童使用的蚊帐状况不佳;而幼儿和成年男子使用的蚊帐状况中等(平均)。在调整混杂因素后,与婴儿使用的蚊帐相比,幼儿和大龄儿童使用的蚊帐上的孔更多。
婴儿和其他弱势群体最有可能睡在最具保护力的蚊帐下。尽管如此,仍需要进行更多的沟通工作,以增加家庭内对完整 ITN 的使用。需要进一步研究以充分了解影响家庭内蚊帐分配的动机。