| Literature DB >> 16457724 |
W Richard Mukabana1, Khadija Kannady, G Michael Kiama, Jasper N Ijumba, Evan M Mathenge, Ibrahim Kiche, Gamba Nkwengulila, Leonard Mboera, Deo Mtasiwa, Yoichi Yamagata, Ingeborg van Schayk, Bart G J Knols, Steven W Lindsay, Marcia Caldas de Castro, Hassan Mshinda, Marcel Tanner, Ulrike Fillinger, Gerry F Killeen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Integrated vector management (IVM) for malaria control requires ecological skills that are very scarce and rarely applied in Africa today. Partnerships between communities and academic ecologists can address this capacity deficit, modernize the evidence base for such approaches and enable future scale up.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16457724 PMCID: PMC1409792 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-5-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1One of the authors from the University of Nairobi explains his research to community members and opinion leaders as well as government officials during an open day at the Mbita Point Research and Training Centre of the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, near Rusinga Island, western Kenya.
Figure 2Community members demonstrate the life cycle of mosquitoes (A) and the use of practicable adult mosquito sampling tools (B) at Rusinga Island Child and Family Programme/Christian Children's Fund-Kenya, African Malaria Day, May 2004 on Rusinga Island, Western Kenya.
Figure 3Field training of Rusinga Island Child and Family Programme community volunteers in sampling for mosquito larvae and pupae at Kaswanga, Rusinga Island, western Kenya.
Figure 4A diagrammatic of the planned institutional frameworks, as envisaged in June 2002, as a means to strengthen malaria control capacity in Rusinga and additional malarious communities in the short (A) and long (B) term.
Figure 5An example of successful, community implemented drain rehabilitation. A: Utofu salt marsh at the north-eastern end of Tanga, Tanzania. Insert is a hoof print harbouring a larva (blue arrow) and five pupae (red arrow) of Anopheles merus. Two to three boarding students were reported to die every year of high fever in Galanos High School on the hill shown on the background. 5B: One week after excavation of drains by community members assembled by the school.
Figure 6Examples of flooded areas in the poorly planned settlements of Vingunguti in Ilala municipality, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Figure 7Examples of community-based malaria surveillance and control in Dar es Salaam. A. Community Own Resource Persons mapping and characterizing mosquito breeding sites in Vingunguti ward, Ilala Municipality in May 2004. B. Children participate in a quiz about malaria and mosquitoes in Mchikichini ward, Ilala Municipality, in April 2004. C. Extensive agricultural breeding sites associated with neglected drains adjacent to Ruihinda Primary School (background), Kigogo Ward, Kinondoni Municipality, in June 2001. D. Kinondoni Municipal Council workers rehabilitate the drain to lower the water table in August 2001. E. The same plots in September 2001.