| Literature DB >> 23318240 |
W Abeyewickreme1, A R Wickremasinghe, K Karunatilake, J Sommerfeld, Kroeger Axel.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Waste management through community mobilization to reduce breeding places at household level could be an effective and sustainable dengue vector control strategy in areas where vector breeding takes place in small discarded water containers. The objective of this study was to assess the validity of this assumption.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23318240 PMCID: PMC3541909 DOI: 10.1179/2047773212Y.0000000060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathog Glob Health ISSN: 2047-7724 Impact factor: 2.894
Figure 1Primary and Secondary Stakeholders of the Project.
Characteristics of households
| Characteristic | Control group (n = 790) | Intervention group (n = 803) | Significance test (chi square test, p-value) |
| Age of head of household | |||
| <50 | 443 (51.6%) | 416 (48.4%) | 2.164 (0.141) |
| ≧50 | 347 (47.9%) | 378 (52.1%) | |
| Gender of head of household | |||
| Male | 640 (48.9%) | 672 (51.2%) | 3.435 (0.064) |
| Female | 150 (54.9%) | 123 (45.1%) | |
| Education level of head of household | |||
| <O Level | 371 (53.7%) | 320 (51.4%) | 7.256 (0.007) |
| ≧O Level | 419 (46.97%) | 475 (53.1%) | |
| Family units per household | |||
| 1 | 744 (51.7%) | 696 (48.3%) | 16.000 (<0.001) |
| >1 | 37 (20.4%) | 144 (79.6%) | |
| Land ownership | |||
| <10 perches | 548 (53.7%) | 472 (46.3%) | 17.260 (<0.001) |
| ≧10 perches | 242 (42.8%) | 323 (57.2%) | |
| Family members per household | |||
| ≤5 | 642 (50.8%0 | 621 (49.2%) | 1.658 (0.198) |
| >5 | 158 (46.9%) | 179 (55.1%0 | |
| Employment status of head of household | |||
| Employed | 642 (49.7%) | 649 (50.3%) | 21.018 (<0.001) |
| Retired | 26 (30.2%) | 60 (21.018%) | |
| Unemployed | 132 (59.2%) | 91 (40.8%) |
Percent reduction of pupae per 100 persons index adjusting for baseline differences
| Index | Control group (mean reduction % ±sd) | Intervention group (mean reduction %±sd) | Significance between intervention and control groups (p-value) |
| Pupae per 100 persons | |||
| Round 2 vs round 1 | −0.667±0.01 | −0.935±0.01 | 0.275 |
| Round 3 vs round 1 | −0.826±0.01 | −0.940±0.01 | 0.547 |
| Round 4 vs round 1 | −0.716±0.01 | −0.982±0.01 | 0.067 |
Figure 2Comparison Pupa per 100 persons Index (PPP) for Control and Treatment Clusters.
Summary statistics of a negative binomial model using the number of pupae at household level in round 2 as the response variable after adjusting for the baseline number of pupae
| Variables | Model coefficient | SD | Incidence Rate Ratio(95% CI) |
| Intercept | −3.320 | 0.6892 | |
| Treatment1 | −1.721 | 0.4217 | 0.179 (0.078–0.409) |
| Education status of head of household (<O/Level)2 | 0.914 | 0.3088 | 2.494 (1.362–4.568) |
| Male3 | 0.432 | 0.4220 | 0.036 (0.009–0.140) |
| Single housing unit4 | −0.019 | 0.5497 | 0.981 (0.334–2.881) |
| Low endemicity5 | −1.276 | 0.3486 | 0.279 (0.141–0.553) |
1 Reference group is control group.
2 Reference group is heads of households with an education above O Level.
3 Reference group is female gender.
4 Reference group is more than one housing unit.
5 Reference group is areas with high endemicity.
Summary statistics of negative binomial model using the number of pupae at household level in round 3 as the response variable after adjusting for the baseline number of pupae
| Variables | Model coefficient | SD | Incidence Rate Ratio (95% CI) |
| Intercept | −2.225 | 0.7418 | |
| Treatment1 | −1.081 | 0.4050 | 0.339 (0.153–0.750) |
| Education status of head of household (<O/Level)2 | −0.988 | 0.4177 | 0.368 (0.162–0.835) |
| Male3 | −0.380 | 0.4422 | 0.688 (0.287–1.626) |
| Single housing unit4 | 0.022 | 0.6309 | 1.022 (0.297–3.520) |
| Low endemicity5 | −1.172 | 0.4111 | 0.310 (0.138–0.694) |
1 Reference group is control group.
2 Reference group is heads of households with an education above O Level.
3 Reference group is female gender.
4 Reference group is more than one housing unit.
5 Reference group is areas with high endemicity.