| Literature DB >> 36107865 |
Lucia Fernandez Montoya1,2, Celso Alafo2,3, Helena Martí-Soler1, Mara Máquina2, Kiba Comiche2, Inocencia Cuamba2, Khatia Munguambe2, Lauren Cator4, Pedro Aide2,5, Beatriz Galatas1,2, Nelson Cuamba6,7, Dulcisaria Marrenjo6, Francisco Saúte2, Krijn P Paaijmans1,2,8,9,10.
Abstract
Characterizing persistent malaria transmission that occurs after the combined deployment of indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) is critical to guide malaria control and elimination efforts. This requires a detailed understanding of both human and vector behaviors at the same temporal and spatial scale. Cross-sectional human behavior evaluations and mosquito collections were performed in parallel in Magude district, Mozambique. Net use and the exact time when participant moved into each of five environments (outdoor, indoor before bed, indoor in bed, indoor after getting up, and outdoor after getting up) were recorded for individuals from three different age groups and both sexes during a dry and a rainy season. Malaria mosquitoes were collected with CDC light traps in combination with collection bottle rotators. The percentage of residual exposure to host-seeking vectors that occurred in each environment was calculated for five local malaria vectors with different biting behaviors, and the actual (at observed levels of LLIN use) and potential (i.e. if all residents had used an LLIN) personal protection conferred by LLINs was estimated. Anopheles arabiensis was responsible for more than 74% of residents' residual exposure to host-seeking vectors during the Magude project. The other four vector species (An. funestus s.s., An. parensis, An. squamosus and An. merus) were responsible for less than 10% each. The personal protection conferred by LLINs prevented only 39.2% of the exposure to host-seeking vectors that survived the implementation of both IRS and LLINs, and it differed significantly across seasons, vector species and age groups. At the observed levels of bednet use, 12.5% of all residual exposure to host-seeking vectors occurred outdoor during the evening, 21.9% indoor before going to bed, almost two thirds (64%) while people were in bed, 1.4% indoors after getting up and 0.2% outdoor after leaving the house. Almost a third of the residual exposure to host-seeking vectors (32.4%) occurred during the low transmission season. The residual bites of An. funestus s.s. and An. parensis outdoors and indoor before bedtime, of An. arabiensis indoors when people are in bed, and of An. squamosus both indoors and outdoors, are likely to have sustained malaria transmission throughout the Magude project. By increasing LLIN use, an additional 24.1% of exposure to the remaining hosts-seeking vectors could have been prevented. Since An. arabiensis, the most abundant vector, feeds primarily while people are in bed, increasing net use and net feeding inhibition (through e.g. community awareness activities and the selection of more effective LLINs) could significantly reduce the exposure to remaining host-seeking mosquitoes. Nonetheless, supplementary interventions aiming to reduce human-vector contact outdoors and/or indoors before people go to bed (e.g. through larval source management, window and eave screening, eave tubes, and spatial repellents) will be needed to reduce residual exposure to the outdoor and early biting An. funestus s.s. and An. parensis.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36107865 PMCID: PMC9477321 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270882
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Map of Magude district.
Red dots represent the households that were enrolled in the human behavioral study; the green areas are areas where entomological surveillance was conducted. The subnational administrative boundaries have been taken from the Humanitarian Data Exchange (https://data.humdata.org/dataset/cod-ab-moz) under a CC-BY-IGO license (https://data.humdata.org/faqs/licenses).
Median time of the day when participants went indoors, went to bed, got up and left the house after getting up, and the median amount of time they spent indoors before going to bed, in bed, and indoors after getting up before leaving the house.
The letters (a,b,c) mark the pairs between which statistically significant differences were observed in pair-wise comparisons with Dunn Test. The * denotes that significant differences were found in all pair-wise comparisons with Dunn test (age groups) or Wilcoxon Mann Whitney (LLIN use).
| Time going indoors (HH:MM) | Time indoors before going to bed (h) | Time to bed (HH:MM) | Time in bed (h) | Time getting up (HH:MM) | Time indoors after getting up (h) | Time leaving house (HH:MM) | Total time indoors (h) | Total time indoors not in bed (h) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | low | high | |
| Age group | ||||||||||||||||||
| 18+ years | 19:30a | 20:02a | 1.3 ab | 0.9 ab | 21:00b | 20:56 b | 8.7* | 8.9 a | 05:57ab | 05:49 ab | 0.4a | 0.4 | 06:23a | 06:16a | 11a | 10.2a | 1.8* | 1.4ab |
| 12–17 years | 19:59ab | 20:01b | 0.5 a | 0.5 a | 20:40a | 20:47 a | 9.3* | 9.2 b | 06:15a | 06:04 a | 0.2ab | 0.3 | 06:38 | 06:24 | 10.5b | 10.4 b | 0.9* | 1.1a |
| 5–11 years | 19:30b | 19:34ab | 0.8 b | 0.6 b | 20:17 ab | 20:20 ab | 9.9* | 10 ab | 06:20b | 06:10 b | 0.5b | 0.3 | 06:46a | 06:42a | 11.5 ab | 11 ab | 1.4* | 1b |
Low: Low transmission season.
High: High transmissions season.
Fig 2Percentage of study participants in each environment during the evening, night and morning.
The environments show are: (i) outdoors before going indoors (grey area on the left-hand side), (ii) indoors but not in bed (yellow on the left-hand side), (iii) indoors in bed using an LLIN (green) or not using an LLIN (red), (iv) indoors but not in bed after getting up (yellow on the right-hand side), (iv) outdoors after getting up (grey area on the right-hand side), during the low transmission (left panel) and high transmission season (right panel). Data including the environment of the study participants after 8am can be found in S3 Fig.
Fig 3Host-seeking behavior of five different malaria vector species in Magude district between 4pm and 8am.
The proportion of host-seeking mosquitoes collected indoors and outdoors is shown in 2 hour intervals.
The contribution of different vector species to the exposure to host-seeking vectors that Magude residents experienced.
‘Residual human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors’ shows the percentage of host-seeking mosquitoes of each vector species that residents were exposed to at the observed levels of bednet use. ‘Unavertable residual human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors’ shows the percentage of host-seeking mosquitoes from each vector species that residents would have been exposed to if they all would have used a net when in bed.
| Seasons combined | Low transmission season | High transmission season | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Species | Actual human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) | Unavertable human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) | Actual human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) | Unavertable human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) | Actual human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) | Unavertable human-adjusted exposure to host-seeking vectors (%) |
| 74.0% (65-6-80.9) | 69.2% (65.6–80.9) | 64.2% (48.3–77.6) | 56.6% (36.8–74.6) | 78.5% (68.6–86.1 | 75.5% (61.8–85.7) | |
| 9.9% (4.8–13.2), | 12.8% (6.7–22.3) | 5.1% (10.2–17.4) | 8.2% (16.5–26.5) | 12.2% (6.6–21.0) | 15% (7.2–27.8) | |
| 5.8% (2.7–11.5) | 7.4% (3.1–15.9) | 17.8% (8.5–32.7) | 22.0% (9.3–42.2) | 0.1% (0–5.0) | 0.1% (0–8.3) | |
| 5.2% (2.3–10.8) | 4.2% (1.2–11.8) | 4.1% (0.6–16.0) | 3.1% (0.9–19.7) | 5.8% (2.2–13.2) | 4.8% (1.1–15.2) | |
| 5.1% (2.2-10-6). | 6.4% (2.4–14.6) | 8.8% (2.8–22.) | 10.1% (2.5–28.8) | 3.3% (0.8–9.9) | 4.5% (0.09–14.7) | |
|
| 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% |
Percentage of host seeking mosquitoes of each of the five vector species that Magude residents were exposed to in each of the five environments where humans and vectors have the opportunity to interact.
These environments are i) outdoors before going indoors, ii) indoors before going to bed, iii) indoors while in bed, iv) indoors after getting up, and v) outdoors after leaving the house again. Percentages are given for the low and high transmission seasons separately, and for the observed levels of bednet use, or assuming a hypothetical scenario in which all residents used a net when in bed.
| Low transmission season | High transmission season | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outdoors evening | Indoors before going to bed | Indoors while in bed | Indoors after getting up | Outdoors morning | Outdoors evening | Indoors before going to bed | Indoors while in bed | Indoors after getting up | Outdoors morning | ||
|
| |||||||||||
| 5.6% (0.7–22.8) | 30.3% (15.3–50.4) | 63%% (43–79.6) | 1.0% (0,16.3) | 0.1% (0–15) | 3.4% (0.8–11.4) | 21.6% (13.2–33.1) | 73.4% (61.5–82.7) | 1.5% (0.1–8.6) | 0.1% (0–6.4) | ||
| 0.0% (0–82.5) | 25% (0–91.2) | 75.0% (8.8–100) | 0.0% (0–82.5) | 0.% (0–82.5) | 0.0% (0–51.6) | 9.7% (0–60.4) | 85.3% (35.4–99.6) | 5.1% (0–56.4) | 0.0 (0–51.6) | ||
| 40.1% (6.2–85.2) | 19.8% (0.4–75.5) | 39.2% (5.6–85.2) | 0.9% (0–62) | 0.0% (0–61.3) | 63.4% (12.7–96.7) | 2.2% (0–69.8) | 33.3% (1.9–87.1) | 1.2% (0–69.1) | 0.0% (0–68.3) | ||
| 49.5% (20.7–78.6) | 17.7% (1.9,58.5) | 32.1% (7.5–70.3) | 0.6% (0–41.3) | 0.0% (0–40.6) | 0.0% (0–99.5) | 93.1 (0.5–100) | 6.9% (0–99.5) | 0.0% (0–99.5%) | 0.0 (0–99.5) | ||
| 100% (23.1–100) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 29.4% (8.6–62.1) | 20.9% (4.4–54.3) | 46.3% (19.6–75.2) | 1.2% (0–33.1) | 2.2 (0–34.3) | ||
| Species combined | 21.1% (10.9–36.4 | 25.4% (12–21) | 52.7% (37.3–67.6) | 0.8% (0–11.2) | 0.1% (0–10.1) | Species combined | 8.4% (3.9–16.5) | 20.3% (12.9–30.1) | 69.4% (58.8–78.3 | 1.6% (0.2–7.6) | 0.3% (0–5.5) |
|
| |||||||||||
| 10.3% (1.3–37.4) | 55.1% (29.4–78.6) | 32.6% (12.8,60.1) | 1.8% (0–27) | 0.3% (0–24.9) | 6.0% (1.3,19.2) | 37.9% (23.8–54.3) | 53.3% (37.4,68.6 | 2.6% (0.2,14.5) | 0.1% (0–19.7) | ||
| 0% (0–95.3) | 54.1% (4.7–96.6) | 49.5% (3.4–95.3) | 0.0% (0–95.3) | 0.0% (0–95.3) | 0% (0–72.5) | 19.5% (0–83.3) | 70.2% (12.1–99.3) | 10.2% (0–78.5) | 0.0% (0–72.5) | ||
| 55.8% (12–92.5) | 27.6% (0.6–86.1) | 15.4% (0–80.1) | 1.3% (0–71.9) | 0.0% (0–71.1) | 78.9% (14.6–100) | 2.7% (0–76.1) | 17.0% (0–83.5) | 1.4% (0–75.4) | 0.0% (0–74.6) | ||
| 64.3% (22.7–92.9) | 23.0% (2.5–68.3) | 11.9 (0.2–59.2) | 0.7% (0–40.9) | 0.8% (0–48.8) | 0.0 (0–99.5) | 95.7% (0.5–100) | 4.3% (0–99.5) | 0.0% (0–99.5) | 0.0% (0–99.5) | ||
| 100% (23.1–100) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.8% (0–48.8) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 40.2% (12–75.6) | 28.5% (6.1–66.7) | 26.0% (5.3–65.1) | 1.7% (0–42.7) | 3.0% (0–42.7) | ||
| Species combined | 33.8 (17.7–54.2) | 40.7% (23.2–60.7) | 24.0% (10.7–44.4) | 0.0% (0–76.9) | 0.2% (0–15.4) | Species combined | 14.1% (6.7–26.8) | 34.1% (22.2–48.2) | 48.4% (34.9-,62.1) | 2.8% (0.3–12.4 | 0.5% (0–9) |
Fig 4The proportion of exposure to host-seeking mosquitoes prevented by the personal protection of LLINs and the distribution of the unprevented exposure across the five different environments.
The proportion of residual exposure to host-seeking vectors are provided at the observed (top) and modeled (bottom) net use (assuming all residents use a net while in bed). Green: exposure prevented by LLINs, dark blue: residual exposure outdoors before going indoors, orange: residual exposure indoors before going to bed, red: residual exposure while in bed, yellow: residual exposure indoors after getting up, light blue: residual exposure outdoors after leaving the house again.