Hongoh Valerie, Campagna Céline, Panic Mirna, Samuel Onil, Gosselin Pierre, Waaub Jean-Philippe, Ravel André, Samoura Karim, Michel Pascal
Groupe de Recherche en Épidémiologie des Zoonoses et Santé Publique, Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, Saint-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada.
Département de pathologie et microbiologie, Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, Saint-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 5;11(8):e0160651. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160651. eCollection 2016.
The recent emergence of West Nile virus (WNV) in North America highlights vulnerability to climate sensitive diseases and stresses the importance of preventive efforts to reduce their public health impact. Effective prevention involves reducing environmental risk of exposure and increasing adoption of preventive behaviours, both of which depend on knowledge and acceptance of such measures. When making operational decisions about disease prevention and control, public health must take into account a wide range of operational, environmental, social and economic considerations in addition to intervention effectiveness. The current study aimed to identify, assess and rank possible risk reduction measures taking into account a broad set of criteria and perspectives applicable to the management of WNV in Quebec under increasing transmission risk scenarios, some of which may be related to ongoing warming in higher-latitude regions. A participatory approach was used to collect information on categories of concern to relevant stakeholders with respect to WNV prevention and control. Multi-criteria decision analysis was applied to examine stakeholder perspectives and their effect on strategy rankings under increasing transmission risk scenarios. Twenty-three preventive interventions were retained for evaluation using eighteen criteria identified by stakeholders. Combined evaluations revealed that, at an individual-level, inspecting window screen integrity, wearing light colored, long clothing, eliminating peridomestic larval sites and reducing outdoor activities at peak times were top interventions under six WNV transmission scenarios. At a regional-level, the use of larvicides was a preferred strategy in five out of six scenarios, while use of adulticides and dissemination of sterile male mosquitoes were found to be among the least favoured interventions in almost all scenarios. Our findings suggest that continued public health efforts aimed at reinforcing individual-level preventive behaviours combined with the application of larvicides to manage the risk of WNV infection are the interventions most acceptable and effective at reaching current management objectives now and under future theoretical transmission risk.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)近期在北美的出现凸显了对气候敏感型疾病的脆弱性,并强调了预防措施对于减少其对公众健康影响的重要性。有效的预防措施包括降低环境暴露风险和增加预防行为的采用,而这两者都依赖于对这些措施的了解和接受程度。在做出疾病预防和控制的业务决策时,除了干预效果外,公共卫生还必须考虑广泛的业务、环境、社会和经济因素。本研究旨在识别、评估并根据一系列广泛的标准和观点,对可能的风险降低措施进行排序,这些标准和观点适用于在传播风险增加的情况下魁北克省西尼罗河病毒的管理,其中一些可能与高纬度地区持续变暖有关。采用参与式方法收集相关利益攸关方在西尼罗河病毒预防和控制方面关注的类别信息。应用多标准决策分析来研究利益攸关方的观点及其在传播风险增加的情况下对战略排名的影响。使用利益攸关方确定的18条标准,保留了23项预防干预措施进行评估。综合评估显示,在个体层面,检查纱窗完整性、穿着浅色长袖衣物、消除住宅周边幼虫滋生地以及在高峰时段减少户外活动是六种西尼罗河病毒传播情况下的首要干预措施。在区域层面,在六种情况中的五种情况下,使用杀幼虫剂是首选策略,而使用杀虫剂和释放绝育雄蚊在几乎所有情况下都是最不受青睐的干预措施之一。我们的研究结果表明,持续的公共卫生努力旨在加强个体层面的预防行为,同时应用杀幼虫剂来管理西尼罗河病毒感染风险,是目前以及在未来理论传播风险情况下最可接受且有效的干预措施,能够实现当前的管理目标。