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Ecologists Can Enable Communities to Implement Malaria Vector Control in Africa

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dc.creator Mukabana, Richard W.
dc.creator Kannady, Khadija
dc.creator Kiama, Michael G.
dc.creator Ijumba, Jasper N.
dc.creator Mathenge, Evan M.
dc.creator Kiche, Ibrahim
dc.creator Nkwengulila, Gamba
dc.creator Mboera, Leonard
dc.creator Mtasiwa, Deo
dc.creator Yamagata, Yoichi
dc.creator Schayk, Ingeborg van
dc.creator Knols, Bart G. J.
dc.creator Lindsay, Steven W.
dc.creator Castro, Marcia C.
dc.creator Mshinda, Hassan
dc.creator Tanner, Marcel
dc.creator Fillinger, Ulrike
dc.creator Killeen, Gerry F.
dc.date 2016-04-12T13:04:18Z
dc.date 2016-04-12T13:04:18Z
dc.date 2006
dc.date.accessioned 2021-05-03T13:28:55Z
dc.date.available 2021-05-03T13:28:55Z
dc.identifier Mukabana, W.R., Kannady, K., Kiama, G.M., Ijumba, J.N., Mathenge, E.M., Kiche, I., Nkwengulila, G., Mboera, L., Mtasiwa, D., Yamagata, Y. and Van Schayk, I., 2006. Ecologists can enable communities to implement malaria vector control in Africa. Malaria Journal, 5(1), p.9.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1481
dc.identifier 10.1186/1475-2875-5-9
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/47307
dc.description Integrated vector management (IVM) for malaria control requires ecological skills that are very scarce and rarely applied in Africa today. Partnerships between communities and academic ecologists can address this capacity deficit, modernize the evidence base for such approaches and enable future scale up. Community-based IVM programmes were initiated in two contrasting settings. On Rusinga Island, Western Kenya, community outreach to a marginalized rural community was achieved by University of Nairobi through a community-based organization. In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Ilala Municipality established an IVM programme at grassroots level, which was subsequently upgraded and expanded into a pilot scale Urban Malaria Control Programme with support from national academic institutes. Both programmes now access relevant expertise, funding and policy makers while the academic partners benefit from direct experience of community-based implementation and operational research opportunities. The communities now access up-to-date malaria-related knowledge and skills for translation into local action. Similarly, the academic partners have acquired better understanding of community needs and how to address the Until sufficient evidence is provided, community-based IVM remains an operational research activity. Researchers can never directly support every community in Africa so community-based IVM strategies and tactics will need to be incorporated into undergraduate teaching programmes to generate sufficient numbers of practitioners for national scale programmes. Academic ecologists at African institutions are uniquely positioned to enable the application of practical environmental and entomological skills for malaria control by communities at grassroots level and should be supported to fulfil this neglected role.
dc.language en
dc.publisher BioMed Central
dc.subject IVM
dc.subject Malaria
dc.subject Communities
dc.subject Ecologists
dc.title Ecologists Can Enable Communities to Implement Malaria Vector Control in Africa
dc.type Journal Article, Peer Reviewed


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