The oral repellent - science fiction or common sense? Insects, vector-borne diseases, failing strategies, and a bold proposition.

IF 2.4 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Irmgard L Bauer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Over the last decades, unimaginable amounts of money have gone into research and development of vector control measures, repellents, treatment, and vaccines for vector borne diseases. Technological progress and scientific breakthroughs allowed for ever more sophisticated and futuristic strategies. Yet, each year, millions of people still die or suffer from potentially serious consequences of malaria or dengue to more recent infections, such as zika or chikungunya, or of debilitating consequences of neglected tropical diseases. This does not seem value for money. In addition, all current vector control strategies and personal protection methods have shortcomings, some serious, that are either destructive to non-target species or unsatisfactory in their effectiveness. On the other hand, the rapid decline in insect populations and their predators reflects decades-long aggressive and indiscriminate vector control. This major disruption of biodiversity has an impact on human life not anticipated by the well-meaning killing of invertebrates. The objective of this paper is to re-examine current control methods, their effectiveness, their impact on biodiversity, human and animal health, and to call for scientific courage in the pursuit of fresh ideas. This paper brings together topics that are usually presented in isolation, thereby missing important links that offer potential solutions to long-standing problems in global health. First, it serves as a reminder of the importance of insects to human life and discusses the few that play a role in transmitting disease. Next, it examines critically the many currently employed vector control strategies and personal protection methods. Finally, based on new insights into insect chemo-sensation and attractants, this perspective makes a case for revisiting a previously abandoned idea, the oral repellent, and its use via currently successful methods of mass-application. The call is out for focused research to provide a powerful tool for public health, tropical medicine, and travel medicine.

Abstract Image

口腔驱虫剂——科幻小说还是常识?昆虫,病媒传播的疾病,失败的策略,和一个大胆的提议。
在过去的几十年里,难以想象的大量资金投入到病媒控制措施、驱蚊剂、治疗和病媒传播疾病疫苗的研究和开发中。技术进步和科学突破使更加复杂和未来的战略成为可能。然而,每年仍有数百万人死于疟疾或登革热,或遭受寨卡病毒或基孔肯雅热等新近感染的潜在严重后果,或因被忽视的热带病造成的衰弱后果。这似乎不值得花钱。此外,目前所有病媒控制策略和个人防护方法都存在一些严重的缺陷,这些缺陷要么对非目标物种具有破坏性,要么效果不理想。另一方面,昆虫种群及其捕食者的迅速减少反映了数十年来积极和不分青红皂白的病媒控制。这种对生物多样性的重大破坏对人类生活的影响是善意的无脊椎动物杀戮所没有预料到的。本文的目的是重新审视当前的控制方法,它们的有效性,它们对生物多样性,人类和动物健康的影响,并呼吁在追求新思想的科学勇气。这篇论文将通常孤立提出的主题汇集在一起,从而错过了为全球卫生中长期问题提供潜在解决方案的重要环节。首先,它提醒人们昆虫对人类生活的重要性,并讨论了少数在传播疾病中起作用的昆虫。接下来,它严格审查了许多目前采用的病媒控制策略和个人保护方法。最后,基于对昆虫化学感觉和引诱剂的新见解,这一观点使人们重新审视一个以前被抛弃的想法,口服驱蚊剂,以及通过目前成功的大规模应用方法来使用它。呼吁开展重点研究,为公共卫生、热带医学和旅行医学提供强有力的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: Tropical Diseases, Travel Medicine and Vaccines is an open access journal that considers basic, translational and applied research, as well as reviews and commentary, related to the prevention and management of healthcare and diseases in international travelers. Given the changes in demographic trends of travelers globally, as well as the epidemiological transitions which many countries are experiencing, the journal considers non-infectious problems including chronic disease among target populations of interest as well as infectious diseases.
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