Larviciding for malaria control and elimination in Africa.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Malaria Journal Pub Date : 2025-01-15 DOI:10.1186/s12936-024-05236-y
Gretchen Newby, Prosper Chaki, Mark Latham, Dulcisária Marrenjo, Eric Ochomo, Derric Nimmo, Edward Thomsen, Allison Tatarsky, Elijah O Juma, Michael Macdonald
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Abstract

Background: Global progress toward malaria elimination and eradication goals has stagnated in recent years, with many African countries reporting increases in malaria morbidity and mortality. Insecticide-treated nets and indoor residual spraying are effective, but the emergence and increased intensity of insecticide resistance and the challenge of outdoor transmission are undermining their impact. New tools are needed to get back on track towards global targets. This Perspective explores the major challenges hindering wider-scale implementation of larviciding in Africa and identifies potential solutions and opportunities to overcome these barriers.

Larviciding in africa: OVERVIEW, CHALLENGES, AND SOLUTIONS: Larviciding is a valuable vector control tool with strong potential for regional scale-up. There is considerable evidence of its effectiveness, and the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends it as a supplemental intervention. However, malaria programmes hoping to implement larviciding face significant barriers, including (1) poor global technical, policy, and funding support; (2) fragmented implementation and experience; (3) high complexity of delivery and impact evaluation; and (4) limited access to the full range of WHO prequalified larvicide products. Strategic barriers related to global policy and donor hesitancy can be overcome through a coordinated demonstration of cost-effectiveness. Technological advancements and strengthened operational capacity have already overcome technical barriers related to larvicide delivery, targeting, coverage, and evaluation. Developing a Community of Practice platform for larviciding has strong potential to consolidate efforts, addressing the challenge of fragmented implementation and experience. Such a platform can serve as a resource center for African malaria programmes, collating and disseminating technical guidance, facilitating the exchange of best practices, and aiding malaria programmes and partners in designing and evaluating larviciding projects.

Conclusion: The global shift toward targeted and adaptive interventions enables the incorporation of larviciding into an expanded vector control toolbox. As more African countries implement larvicide programmes, establishing a regional Community of Practice platform for exchanging experiences and best practices is necessary to strengthen the evidence base for cost-effective implementation, advocate for support, and inform policy recommendations, thus supporting Africa's progress toward malaria elimination.

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在非洲控制和消除疟疾的杀幼虫剂。
背景:近年来,全球在实现消除和根除疟疾目标方面的进展停滞不前,许多非洲国家报告疟疾发病率和死亡率有所上升。驱虫蚊帐和室内滞留喷洒是有效的,但杀虫剂耐药性的出现和增强以及室外传播的挑战正在削弱其效果。需要新的工具来回到实现全球目标的轨道上来。本展望探讨了阻碍在非洲更大范围实施杀幼虫的主要挑战,并确定了克服这些障碍的潜在解决办法和机会。非洲灭蚊幼虫:概述、挑战和解决办法:灭蚊幼虫是一种有价值的病媒控制工具,具有很强的区域推广潜力。有大量证据表明其有效性,世界卫生组织(世卫组织)建议将其作为一种补充干预措施。然而,希望实施杀幼虫的疟疾规划面临重大障碍,包括:(1)缺乏全球技术、政策和资金支持;(2)实施和经验分散;(3)交付和影响评估的复杂性高;(4)获得世卫组织资格预审的全系列杀幼虫剂产品受到限制。通过协调一致地展示成本效益,可以克服与全球政策和捐助者犹豫不决有关的战略障碍。技术进步和业务能力的加强已经克服了与杀幼虫剂投放、目标确定、覆盖和评价有关的技术障碍。开发一个灭蚊幼虫的实践社区平台具有强大的潜力,可以巩固工作,解决实施和经验分散的挑战。这样一个平台可以作为非洲疟疾规划的资源中心,整理和传播技术指导,促进最佳做法的交流,并帮助疟疾规划和合作伙伴设计和评估灭蚊项目。结论:全球向有针对性和适应性干预措施的转变使得将杀幼虫纳入扩大的病媒控制工具箱成为可能。随着越来越多的非洲国家实施杀幼虫剂规划,有必要建立一个交流经验和最佳做法的区域实践共同体平台,以加强具有成本效益实施的证据基础,倡导支持并为政策建议提供信息,从而支持非洲在消除疟疾方面取得进展。
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来源期刊
Malaria Journal
Malaria Journal 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
23.30%
发文量
334
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Malaria Journal is aimed at the scientific community interested in malaria in its broadest sense. It is the only journal that publishes exclusively articles on malaria and, as such, it aims to bring together knowledge from the different specialities involved in this very broad discipline, from the bench to the bedside and to the field.
期刊最新文献
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