Paz-Soldan Valerie A, Yukich Josh, Soonthorndhada Amara, Giron Maziel, Apperson Charles S, Ponnusamy Loganathan, Schal Coby, Morrison Amy C, Keating Joseph, Wesson Dawn M
Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, 1440 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA 70112 United States of America.
Facultad de Salud Pública y Administración, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Avenida Honorio Delgado 430, Urb. Ingeniería, San Martín de Porres, Lima, Peru.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 17;11(8):e0160386. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160386. eCollection 2016.
Dengue virus (and Chikungunya and Zika viruses) is transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes and causes considerable human morbidity and mortality. As there is currently no vaccine or chemoprophylaxis to protect people from dengue virus infection, vector control is the only viable option for disease prevention. The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the design and placement process for an attractive lethal ovitrap to reduce vector populations and to describe lessons learned in the development of the trap.
This study was conducted in 2010 in Iquitos, Peru and Lopburi Province, Thailand and used an iterative community-based participatory approach to adjust design specifications of the trap, based on community members' perceptions and feedback, entomological findings in the lab, and design and research team observations. Multiple focus group discussions (FGD) were held over a 6 month period, stratified by age, sex and motherhood status, to inform the design process. Trap testing transitioned from the lab to within households.
Through an iterative process of working with specifications from the research team, findings from the laboratory testing, and feedback from FGD, the design team narrowed trap design options from 22 to 6. Comments from the FGD centered on safety for children and pets interacting with traps, durability, maintenance issues, and aesthetics. Testing in the laboratory involved releasing groups of 50 gravid Ae. aegypti in walk-in rooms and assessing what percentage were caught in traps of different colors, with different trap cover sizes, and placed under lighter or darker locations. Two final trap models were mocked up and tested in homes for a week; one model was the top choice in both Iquitos and Lopburi.
The community-based participatory process was essential for the development of novel traps that provided effective vector control, but also met the needs and concerns of community members.
登革病毒(以及基孔肯雅病毒和寨卡病毒)通过埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊传播,会导致大量人类发病和死亡。由于目前尚无疫苗或化学预防措施来保护人们免受登革病毒感染,病媒控制是预防该疾病的唯一可行选择。本文旨在阐述一种诱杀式产卵诱捕器的设计和放置过程,以减少病媒数量,并描述在诱捕器开发过程中吸取的经验教训。
本研究于2010年在秘鲁伊基托斯和泰国华富里府开展,采用基于社区的迭代参与式方法,根据社区成员的看法和反馈、实验室的昆虫学研究结果以及设计和研究团队的观察,调整诱捕器的设计规格。在6个月的时间里,按年龄、性别和孕产状况进行分层,组织了多次焦点小组讨论,为设计过程提供信息。诱捕器测试从实验室转移到家庭内部。
通过将研究团队的规格要求、实验室测试结果以及焦点小组讨论的反馈进行反复整合,设计团队将诱捕器的设计选项从22种减少到6种。焦点小组讨论的意见主要集中在儿童和宠物与诱捕器互动时的安全性、耐用性、维护问题以及美观性。实验室测试包括在步入式房间中释放50只埃及伊蚊孕蚊,评估不同颜色、不同诱捕器盖子尺寸以及放置在较亮或较暗位置的诱捕器捕获的蚊虫比例。制作了两种最终诱捕器模型并在家庭中进行了为期一周的测试;其中一种模型在伊基托斯和华富里都是首选。
基于社区的参与式过程对于开发能有效控制病媒且满足社区成员需求和关注点的新型诱捕器至关重要。