| Literature DB >> 33036350 |
Nina Berlin Rubin1, Leonard E G Mboera2, Adriane Lesser3, Marie Lynn Miranda4, Randall Kramer3.
Abstract
Microbial larviciding can be an effective component of integrated vector management malaria control schemes, although it is not commonly implemented. Moreover, quality control and evaluation of intervention activities are essential to evaluate the potential of community-based larviciding interventions. We conducted a process evaluation of a larval source management intervention in rural Tanzania where local staff were employed to apply microbial larvicide to mosquito breeding habitats with the aim of long-term reductions in malaria transmission. We developed a logic model to guide the process evaluation and then established quantitative indicators to measure intervention success. Quantitative analysis of intervention reach, exposure, and fidelity was performed to assess larvicide application, and interviews with larviciding staff were reviewed to provide context to quantitative results. Results indicate that the intervention was successful in terms of reach, as staff applied microbial larvicide at 80% of identified mosquito breeding habitats. However, the dosage of larvicide applied was sufficient to ensure larval elimination at only 26% of sites, which does not meet the standard set for intervention fidelity. We propose that insufficient training and protocol adaptation, environment and resource issues, and human error contributed to low larvicide application rates. This demonstrates how several small, context-specific details in sum can result in meaningful differences between intervention blueprint and execution. These findings may serve the design of other larval source management interventions by demonstrating the value of additional training, supervision, and measurement and evaluation of protocol adherence.Entities:
Keywords: Tanzania; implementation assessment; larval source management; malaria; microbial larvicide; process evaluation; vector control
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036350 PMCID: PMC7579308 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17197309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Location of 12 villages included in the larviciding intervention in the Mvomero District of Tanzania. Locations are approximate.
Figure 2Site form filled out by larviciding staff at each larval breeding site identified.
Figure 3Logic model for the malarial larviciding component of the Mvomero Project intervention.
Indicators and analysis methods.
| Indicator | Analysis | Metrics | Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reach | Quantitative | Percentage of breeding habitats identified with subsequent larvicide application | >75% |
| Exposure | Quantitative | Mean and median larvicide application dosage | ≥5 kg per hectare |
| Fidelity | Quantitative | Percentage of breeding habitats identified receiving an adequate dosage of larvicide (≥5 kg/ha) | ≥50% |
| Resources | Qualitative | Review of supervisor reports and in-depth interviews with larviciding staff | Not applicable |
Figure 4Percentage of sites visited receiving larvicide application of any amount for sites with and without reported larval presence. The green dashed line depicts the success standard of 75%.
Figure 5Average and median larvicide application rates (in kilograms per hectare) by village. The green dashed line depicts the standard of 5 kg/ha.
Figure 6Percentage of sites receiving larvicide that were larvicided with an adequate dosage of at least 5 kg per hectare, by village. The green dashed line depicts the standard of 50% of sites receiving an adequate dosage of larvicide application.