geographical approach to identify sleeping sickness risk factors in a mangrove ecosystem

To provide a better understanding of sleeping sickness transmission and spread in mangrove areas to optimize its control. In the Forecariah mangrove area, Guinea, 19 sleeping sickness cases and 19 matched controls were followed up in their living areas (at home, in fields and at water points). All o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tropical medicine & international health 2010-08, Vol.15 (8), p.881-889
Hauptverfasser: Courtin, F, Jamonneau, V, Camara, M, Camara, O, Coulibaly, B, Diarra, A, Solano, P, Bucheton, B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To provide a better understanding of sleeping sickness transmission and spread in mangrove areas to optimize its control. In the Forecariah mangrove area, Guinea, 19 sleeping sickness cases and 19 matched controls were followed up in their living areas (at home, in fields and at water points). All occupational sites and pathways were mapped and then placed in their environmental context. The sleeping sickness cases displayed a significantly broader and more diverse spatial occupation than the controls. They covered double the daily walking distances of controls and had on average two more occupational sites, most of which were located in mangrove forests. Activities with a higher transmission risk (rice culture, attendance of pirogue jetties) were identified as well as high-risk areas and pathways. An entomological control strategy targeting transmission risk areas is proposed. Its implementation in a control programme would reduce by 86% the efforts needed for a classical vector control programme throughout the area. Medical surveys set up at specific locations, such as pirogue jetties and high-risk paths, should also enable better targeting of the population at highest risk.
ISSN:1360-2276
1365-3156
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-3156.2010.02559.x