Acceptability of Potential Mosquito Control Activities
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I1_1. Would you support the use of indoor residual spraying? Interviewer: Read the responses.
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I1_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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Interviewer: Show
the visual aid for AGO traps. Interviewer
read the following: AGOs
have two components: a 5-galon black plastic container with
water and hay, and a capture chamber that contains sticky paper
and a metal screen.
The
water and hay, and the dark color of the trap, attract female
mosquitoes that look for containers to lay their eggs.
Once
the female mosquito is inside the capture chamber of the trap,
the screen prevents it reaching the water.
When
the mosquito rests on the walls of the capture chamber, it gets
stuck to the sticky paper.
No
professionally trained staff are needed to install the trap.
Traps
require maintenance every 2 months to maintain efficacy and
avoid becoming mosquito breeding sites.
To
reduce the number of mosquitoes, AGOs must be used in the
majority of houses in a community. AGOs
have been used in several places in Puerto Rico, including
Caguas and Salinas, and have reduced the number of mosquitoes.
I2_1. Would you support the use of AGO traps for mosquitoes?
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I2_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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Interviewer
read the following: Sterile
Insect Technique is a method to control insects and has been
used for many different insect species. The
principle of the sterile insect technique involves releasing
many sterile male insects to compete with wild fertile male
insects. When
a female mates with an introduced sterile male, there are no
offspring and the population of the insects will decrease. In
mosquitoes, there are different ways of making the males
sterile. Examples include: genetic modification and introduction
of a bacteria. Both of these are created in a lab. Large
numbers (many thousands) of sterile mosquitoes need to be
released periodically in order to keep the number of sterile
males stable within a population. This
technique can be used in many different insects and has been
used primarily in agriculture.
Each
use of sterile insect technique is species-specific and does not
pose a risk to humans or other animals or insects. Now
we will discuss two ways of using sterile insect technique in
mosquitoes.
Interviewer: Show
the visual aid for male GM mosquitoes. Interviewer
read the following: In
this method, male genetically modified mosquitoes are released.
Female mosquitoes are not released.
Genetically
modified mosquitoes are mosquitoes that have had part of their
genetic information changed in a
laboratory.
These
male mosquitoes mate with wild females and pass to their
offspring a gene that prevents larvae and pupae from developing
normally. In this way, larvae and pupae die before they become
adult mosquitoes.
These
mosquitoes need to be released several times per week for a
prolonged period to keep the mosquito populations low.
Mosquito
population will eventually increase again when the releases of
genetically modified mosquitoes stop.
The
use of genetically modified mosquitoes is safe for people,
animals, and the environment. GM
male mosquitoes have been used in Brasil, Panama, and Cayman
Islands.
At
present, they have not been evaluated in the US, but permissions
have been granted for evaluations to take place in a number of
states in the US.
I3_1. Would you support the use of male genetically modified mosquitoes?
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I3_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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Interviewer
read the following:
Wolbachia
is a bacterium that lives inside many insects, including some
mosquito species.
There
is a type of Wolbachia that makes Aedes aegypti mosquitoes less
capable of transmitting dengue, chikungunya, and Zika viruses to
people.
Since
this type of Wolbachia has not been found in Aedes
aegypti
mosquitoes, scientists have introduced this bacterium in the
mosquitoes in a lab, so that they are less capable of
transmitting viruses.
Wolbachia
does not cause disease in humans and its use is safe for people,
animals and the environment.
Mosquitoes
with Wolbachia
can be used in two different ways.
Interviewer: Show
the visual aid for male mosquitoes with Wolbachia. Interviewer
read the following: This
technique can be used releasing only
male
Aedes aegypti
mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia. Female mosquitoes carrying
Wolbachia are not released. When it is used this way, it is
considered a sterile insect technique. When
male mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia mate with wild females
without Wolbachia. These
female mosquitoes without Wolbachia
lay their eggs, but these do not hatch.
These
mosquitoes need to be released several times per week for a
prolonged period to keep the mosquito populations low.
Mosquito
population will eventually increase again when the releases of
mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia stop. Male
mosquitoes with Wolbachia have been used in California and the
Florida Keys and have been approved for evaluation in Miami, FL.
I4_1. ¿ Would you support the use of male mosquitoes with Wolbachia? Interviewer: Read the responses.
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I4_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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Interviewer: Show the visual aid for male and female mosquitoes with Wolbachia.
Interviewer read the following:
There is another way to use Wolbachia, that is not a sterile insect technique, in which both female and male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia are released.
When the female mosquito carrying Wolbachia mates with a male mosquito with or without Wolbachia, the bacterium is passed through the female to its offspring from generation to generation.
Over time, the amount of mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia increases and replaces the wild mosquitoes without Wolbachia.
After releasing these mosquitoes many times over a period of months, the population of mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia will stay stable without the need for further releases.
Mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia are less capable of disease transmission.
There will still be mosquitoes in the community—the intention of this method is not the reduction of the number of mosquitoes but to reduce the risk of disease outbreaks.
This technology has been used in Colombia, Brazil, and other countries. Currently, there are no established regulations for the use of both male and female mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia in the US.
I5_1. Would you support the use of male and female mosquitoes with Wolbachia? Interviewer: Read the responses.
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I5_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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Interviewer: Show
the visual aid for larvicides. Interviewer
read the following: Larvicides
are insecticides that kill mosquito larvae. If applied
correctly, larvicides can potentially reduce the number of adult
mosquitoes. There
are different types of larvicides and they come in different
formulations, for example: liquid, granules and briquettes.
Liquid larvicides can be applied using truck mounted equipment,
spraying them over houses, vegetation, empty lots and other
places. In this way, this method may be effective to treat most
of the places where larvae are found.
Larvicides
can also be applied manually to water where larvae are found,
for example, fountains, tree holes, gutters, etc. When
larvicide is used according to specific label instructions, it
does not affect the environment, people, or pets. Larvicide
application needs to be repeated according to specific label
instructions. Although
unlikely, with repeated use, larvae could become resistant to
the effects of larvicides. Resistance means that the larvae
resists the effects of the larvicide and don’t die.
Larvicides
are used around the world.
I6_1. Would you support the use of larvicides? Interviewer: Read the responses.
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I6_2. What are the reasons you oppose?
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| File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
| Author | Little, Emma (CDC/OID/NCEZID) |
| File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
| File Created | 2022-04-11 |