Abstract

In the field of public health entomology, the concept of integrated arthropod control has not emerged as a working principle to the extent that it has in agriculture. Part of this lag is due to economic considerations as well as to a marked preference for (a) rote operations and for (b) curative means as opposed to preventive measures. Except in states where the tourist trade is a major economic factor, vector control programs in the United States rarely provide benefits that are clearly measurable in terms of dollars.

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