Abstract

Aedes-borne viral diseases such as dengue fever are surging in incidence in recent years. To investigate viral transmission risks, the availability of local transmission parameters is essential. One of the most important factors directly determining infection risk is human-mosquito contact. Yet the contact rate is not often characterized, compared with other risk metrics such as vector density, because of the limited research tool options. In this study, human-mosquito contact was assessed in two study sites in the Southern United States using self-administered standardized survey instruments. The fraction of mosquito bites attributed to important vector species was estimated by human landing sampling. The survey participants reported a significantly higher outdoor mosquito bite exposure than indoor. The reported bite number was positively correlated with outdoor time during at-risk periods. There was also a significant effect of the study site on outdoor bite exposure, possibly due to the differing vector density. Thus, the levels of human-mosquito contact in this study were influenced both by the mosquito density and human behaviors. A dengue virus transmission model demonstrated that the observed difference in the contact rates results in differential virus transmission risks. Our findings highlight the practicality of using surveys to investigate human-mosquito contact in a setting where bite exposure levels differ substantially, and serve as a basis for further evaluations. This study underscores a new avenue that can be used in combination with other field methods to understand how changes in human behavior may influence mosquito bite exposure which drives mosquito-borne virus transmission.

Highlights

  • Mosquito-borne viral diseases are on the rise

  • Even though the human-mosquito contact rate is among the most important indicators of mosquito-borne viral transmission risk, it is rarely characterized in the field

  • We tested the feasibility of using surveys to quantify mosquito bite exposure in the Southern United States

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Summary

Introduction

Mosquito-borne viral diseases are on the rise. In the past few decades, diseases such as dengue, West Nile fever, chikungunya, and Zika have emerged and persisted in the parts of the world where their mosquito vectors thrive [1-5]. It has been estimated that hundreds of thousands of people die from mosquito-borne diseases each year [6]. Population growth, unplanned urbanization, global warming, intercontinental travel, and the breakdown of mosquito control infrastructure have all contributed to the expansion of mosquito vectors in multiple locations throughout the world [7-11]. Dengue fever is the most common and widespread mosquito-borne viral disease in the world [12]. According to a recent study [13] about 390 million dengue viral infections occurred in

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