Schoch-Spana Monica, Watson Crystal, Ravi Sanjana, Meyer Diane, Pechta Laura E, Rose Dale A, Lubell Keri M, Podgornik Michelle N, Sell Tara Kirk
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, 621 East Pratt Street, Suite 210, Baltimore, MD 21202, USA.
Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2020 Jan 25;18:101059. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101059. eCollection 2020 Jun.
Aerial spraying of products to kill larvae or adult mosquitoes is a public health measure used to control vector-borne diseases. In some outbreaks, the intervention has evoked controversy and community resistance. This study evaluated how local opinion leaders in US localities affected by Zika think about community engagement in public health policies for outbreak response. In December 2017 through March 2018, 4 focus groups were convened in Houston, TX, New Orleans, LA, Miami, FL, and Brooklyn, NY. They discussed a hypothetical scenario that featured vector control by aerial spraying. Participants (N = 20) more readily accepted this vector control method under 4 conditions: They were informed of alternatives, benefits, and risks for human health and the environment. Public health claims were backed by objective evidence and an authority figure genuinely working in the community's interests. They received timely notice about how to mitigate toxin exposure. And, aerial spraying helped to protect vulnerable individuals. The community engagement requirements of the local opinion leaders resonate with core principles of recent public health ethics frameworks: namely, personal autonomy, transparency, reasonableness, and solidarity. Participants foresaw problems with community consent in an era of growing social media use and mistrust in governmental and scientific authority. They also debated whether health authorities should use moral-based arguments, in addition to science-based ones, to communicate aerial spraying's risks and benefits.
空中喷洒灭蚊产品是一种用于控制病媒传播疾病的公共卫生措施。在一些疫情爆发中,这种干预措施引发了争议和社区抵制。本研究评估了受寨卡病毒影响的美国各地的当地意见领袖如何看待社区参与应对疫情的公共卫生政策。2017年12月至2018年3月,在德克萨斯州休斯顿、路易斯安那州新奥尔良、佛罗里达州迈阿密和纽约布鲁克林召开了4个焦点小组会议。他们讨论了一个以空中喷洒进行病媒控制为特色的假设情景。参与者(N = 20)在以下4种情况下更容易接受这种病媒控制方法:他们被告知人类健康和环境的替代方案、益处和风险;公共卫生声明有客观证据支持,且有一位真正为社区利益工作的权威人物;他们及时收到有关如何减轻毒素暴露的通知;并且,空中喷洒有助于保护弱势群体。当地意见领袖的社区参与要求与近期公共卫生伦理框架的核心原则相呼应:即个人自主权、透明度、合理性和团结。参与者预见到在社交媒体使用日益增加以及对政府和科学权威不信任的时代,社区同意方面会出现问题。他们还辩论了卫生当局除了基于科学的论据之外,是否应该使用基于道德的论据来传达空中喷洒的风险和益处。