Popis: |
Insecticides are widely used to control the insects that spread human infectious diseases, in particular falciparum malaria. This widespread use has driven insecticide resistance (IR) to high levels that may threaten the effectiveness of future control programmes. There is interest in identifying deployment methods that alleviate the pressures driving IR and we investigate three. Mixtures are, as already known, highly effective in slowing IR providing their effectiveness (ability to kill fully sensitive insects) remain close to 100%. Mixtures may be expensive and/or operationally difficult so two alternatives to mixtures were investigated. Panels, where different insecticides are physically closely adjacent, for examples, different panels on the same bednet; mosquitoes may therefore encounter both insecticides in the same foraging cycle. Micro-mosaics where different insecticides are deployed in slightly wider geographic proximity, for example in adjacent dwellings. The mosquitoes are unlikely to encountered both insecticides in the same foraging cycle but may encounter different insecticides in subsequent foraging. It is hoped that panels and/or micro-mosaics may, by allowing individual mosquitoes to potentially encounter both insecticides, be effective, lower-cost alternatives to mixtures. Our results suggest this is unlikely to be the case. When insecticides are fully effective then mixtures remain clearly the best strategy. As effectiveness falls then all three strategies are roughly equal. The operational decision of what deployment methods to use depends on how confident we are that insecticides will have high effectiveness that will be maintained in realistic field conditions post-deployment. |