| Literature DB >> 29017531 |
Ambinina Ramanantsoa1,2, Marta Wilson-Barthes3, Rindra Rahenintsoa1,2, Sarah Hoibak4, Harilala Ranaivoharimina5, Martha Delphine Rahelimalala6, Avotiana Rakotomanga7, Alyssa Finlay8, Joan Muela Ribera9, Koen Peeters Grietens10,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing awareness of the likely impact increased numbers of LLINs will have on the environment, if not disposed of or recycled appropriately. As part of a World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) pilot study to assess environmentally-sound and cost-effective LLIN recycling strategies, the USAID-Deliver Project collected 22,559 used bed nets in Madagascar. A social science study was conducted to provide data on socio-cultural factors related to collection and replacement of LLINs, including impact on primary and other net uses.Entities:
Keywords: Disposal; Insecticide treated nets (ITNs); Long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs); Malaria; Net collection campaign; Recycling
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29017531 PMCID: PMC5634957 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-2053-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Study objectives by factor
| Exploratory factor | Research objective |
|---|---|
| Net coverage | To evaluate whether, in real life conditions, the presence of the old nets in the household is likely to maintain, increase or decrease general net coverage and use of LLINS |
| Alternative/secondary net use | To assess under what conditions LLINs are no longer used for sleeping |
| To identify alternative uses for bed nets which are no longer used for sleeping | |
| To inform the decision, based on observed socio-cultural and ethical activities, of whether or not alternative net uses should be discouraged or encouraged for increased malaria prevention | |
| LLIN distribution effectivity | To assess the factors related to continuation or cessation of using old ITN/LLINs for sleeping when newer nets are introduced in the household (i.e. do pregnant women and children use new nets or continue to use old nets while saving new nets for future use) |
| Recycling practices and perceptions | To assess community acceptability of returning bed nets which are no longer used for sleeping during collection campaigns |
| To explore general community perceptions about reusing, recycling, energy recovery, replacing and disposing of LLINs | |
| Perceived health risks from recycled LLINs | To assess communities’ perceived risk of using LLINs after recycling campaigns and related IEC campaigns attributed to the “toxicity” or “harmfulness” of LLINs |
| To gather preliminary data on any possible concern related to the future implementation and corresponding health risks of LLIN life-cycle management | |
| Net type | To describe in detail the life cycle of varying types and make of bed nets in communities |
| To assess community practices of LLIN use, maintenance and disposal in relation to net type and characteristics, both for nets currently in use and those newly distributed | |
| Net waste | To evaluate what socio-cultural and physical characteristics define a net as “expired” or “waste” (i.e. no longer used for any purposes) |
| To identify local communities’ current methods of LLIN disposal of nets which are no longer used for any purposes |
Characteristics and demography of study districts
| Betioky | Tsihombe | Ambanja | Fenerive Est | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | 194,562 | 104,369 | 180,446 | 292,219 |
| Ethnic group (predominant) | Mahafaly | Antandroy | Antakarana; Sakalava | Betsimisaraka |
| LLIN collection through USAID-Deliver (%) | 61 | 15 | None collected | None collected |
| Municipalities | 27 | 13 | 23 | 12 |
| Fokontany | 342 | 77 | 187 | 150 |
| Geography | South-west | South | Northwest | East seaside area |
| Sub-desert | Diana region | |||
| Seaside area | East seaside area | |||
| Topography | ||||
| Latitude | 23° 38 south | 25° 19 south | 13.68° south | 17° 22 south |
| Longitude | 44° 55 east | 45° 29 east | 48.45° east | 49° 25 east |
| Malaria transmission seasonality (facies) 2010 | Sub-desert | Sub-desert | Equatorial | Equatorial |
| Occasional | Occasional | January–June | January–June | |
| Sporadic transmission | Sporadic transmission | Long-lasting transmission | Long-lasting transmission | |
| Malaria prevalence (2010) (%) | 1.30 | 3.74 | 12.04 | 11.33 |
| Accessibility | Difficult | Difficult | Difficult | Highly accessible |
Population data from National Statistics Institute of Madagascar (INSTAT/DDSS 2011)