Abstract

Aedes aegypti transmitted arboviral diseases are of significant importance in Colombia, particularly since the 2014/2015 introduction of chikungunya and Zika in the Americas and the increasing spread of dengue. In response, the Colombian government initiated the scaling-up of a community-based intervention under inter and multi-sector partnerships in two out of four sectors in Girardot, one of the most hyper-endemic dengue cities in the country. Using a quasi-experimental research design a scaled-up community-led Aedes control intervention was assessed for its capacity to reduce dengue from January 2010 to August 2017 in Girardot, Colombia. Reported dengue cases, and associated factors were analysed from available data sets from the Colombian disease surveillance systems. We estimated the reduction in dengue cases before and after the intervention using, Propensity Score Matching and an Autoregressive Moving Average model for robustness. In addition, the differences in dengue incidence among scaling-up phases (pre-implementation vs sustainability) and between treatment groups (intervention and control areas) were modelled. Evidence was found in favour of the intervention, although to maximise impact the scaling-up of the intervention should continue until it covers the remaining sectors. It is expected that a greater impact of the intervention can be documented in the next outbreak of dengue in Girardot.

Highlights

  • Aedes aegypti is the principal vector of dengue, chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever, and is found in all continents but Antarctica [1]

  • Effectiveness of a scaled-up community intervention for Aedes aegypti control in Colombia nets employed in this study were donated by the Ministry of Health of Colombia

  • Between 2010 (1st epidemiological week) and 2017 (33rd epidemiological week), 3,193 suspected dengue cases were reported to the surveillance system of Girardot, of which 99.6% were clinically classified as dengue

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Summary

Introduction

Aedes aegypti is the principal vector of dengue, chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever, and is found in all continents but Antarctica [1]. Aedes transmitted diseases account for approximately 23% of the estimated global burden of vector-borne diseases [2] and pose a significant economic cost for governments in endemic countries that are responsible for case. Effectiveness of a scaled-up community intervention for Aedes aegypti control in Colombia nets employed in this study were donated by the Ministry of Health of Colombia. Colciencias URL: https://www.colciencias.gov.co/ IDRC URL: https:// www.idrc.ca/ The funders had no role in the e study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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