Abstract

BackgroundIn Vietnam, malaria is becoming progressively restricted to specific foci where human and vector characteristics alter the known malaria epidemiology, urging for alternative or adapted control strategies. Long-lasting insecticidal hammocks (LLIH) were designed and introduced in Ninh Thuan province, south-central Vietnam, to control malaria in the specific context of forest malaria. An entomological study in this specific forested environment was conducted to assess the behavioural patterns of forest and village vectors and to assess the spatio-temporal risk factors of malaria transmission in the province.MethodsFive entomological surveys were conducted in three villages in Ma Noi commune and in five villages in Phuoc Binh commune in Ninh Thuan Province, south-central Vietnam. Collections were made inside the village, at the plot near the slash-and-burn fields in the forest and on the way to the forest. All collected mosquito species were subjected to enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect Plasmodium in the head-thoracic portion of individual mosquitoes after morphological identification. Collection data were analysed by use of correspondence and multivariate analyses.ResultsThe mosquito density in the study area was low with on average 3.7 anopheline bites per man-night and 17.4 culicine bites per man-night. Plasmodium-infected mosquitoes were only found in the forest and on the way to the forest. Malaria transmission in the forested malaria foci was spread over the entire night, from dusk to dawn, but was most intense in the early evening as nine of the 13 Plasmodium positive bites occurred before 21H. The annual entomological inoculation rate of Plasmodium falciparum was 2.2 infective bites per person-year to which Anopheles dirus s.s. and Anopheles minimus s.s. contributed. The Plasmodium vivax annual entomological inoculation rate was 2.5 infective bites per person-year with Anopheles sawadwongporni, Anopheles dirus s.s. and Anopheles pampanai as vectors.ConclusionThe vector behaviour and spatio-temporal patterns of malaria transmission in Southeast Asia impose new challenges when changing objectives from control to elimination of malaria and make it necessary to focus not only on the known main vector species. Moreover, effective tools to prevent malaria transmission in the early evening and in the early morning, when the treated bed net cannot be used, need to be developed.

Highlights

  • In Vietnam, malaria is becoming progressively restricted to specific foci where human and vector characteristics alter the known malaria epidemiology, urging for alternative or adapted control strategies

  • Mosquito collections Five entomological surveys (November 2004, October and November 2005, October and November 2006) were conducted in three villages in Ma Noi commune and in Laboratory analyses All collected mosquito species were subjected to enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax 210 and P. vivax 247 circumsporozoite protein (CSP) in the head-thoracic portion of individual mosquitoes [11,12,13]

  • Anopheles dirus s.s., the only species of the complex occurring in this area [20], and An. maculatus s.l. were significantly associated with the forest in both Phuoc Binh and Ma Noi, while An. minimus s.l. was identified as a forest species associated with Ma Noi commune (Figure 1, Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

In Vietnam, malaria is becoming progressively restricted to specific foci where human and vector characteristics alter the known malaria epidemiology, urging for alternative or adapted control strategies. Longlasting insecticidal hammocks (LLIH) were designed and introduced in Ninh Thuan province, south-central Vietnam, to control malaria in the specific context of forest malaria. Long-lasting insecticidal materials are central in the prevention and control of malaria To be successful they need to be adapted to the local epidemiological context. The vector present in this forested area, Anopheles dirus, is exophagic and exophilic, jeopardizing the impact of the traditional control measures [6] To protect this specific human population, an adapted preventive measure, namely longlasting insecticidal hammocks (LLIH), were proposed. An entomological study was conducted, in the framework of the above mentioned community-based trial, to assess the behavioural patterns of forest and village vectors and to assess the spatio-temporal risk factors of malaria transmission in this province

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