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International Workshop on Insecticide Resistance in Vectors of Arboviruses, December 2016, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil Publisher Pubmed



Corbel V1 ; Fonseca DM2 ; Weetman D3 ; Pinto J4 ; Achee NL5 ; Chandre F1 ; Coulibaly MB6 ; Dusfour I7 ; Grieco J5 ; Juntarajumnong W8 ; Lenhart A9 ; Martins AJ11 ; Moyes C12 ; Ng LC13 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Corbel V1
  2. Fonseca DM2
  3. Weetman D3
  4. Pinto J4
  5. Achee NL5
  6. Chandre F1
  7. Coulibaly MB6
  8. Dusfour I7
  9. Grieco J5
  10. Juntarajumnong W8
  11. Lenhart A9
  12. Martins AJ11
  13. Moyes C12
  14. Ng LC13
  15. Raghavendra K14
  16. Vatandoost H15
  17. Vontas J16, 17
  18. Muller P18
  19. Kasai S19
  20. Fouque F20
  21. Velayudhan R21
  22. Durot C1
  23. David JP22

Source: Parasites and Vectors Published:2017


Abstract

Vector-borne diseases transmitted by insect vectors such as mosquitoes occur in over 100 countries and affect almost half of the world’s population. Dengue is currently the most prevalent arboviral disease but chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever show increasing prevalence and severity. Vector control, mainly by the use of insecticides, play a key role in disease prevention but the use of the same chemicals for more than 40 years, together with the dissemination of mosquitoes by trade and environmental changes, resulted in the global spread of insecticide resistance. In this context, innovative tools and strategies for vector control, including the management of resistance, are urgently needed. This report summarizes the main outputs of the first international workshop on Insecticide resistance in vectors of arboviruses held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-8 December 2016. The primary aims of this workshop were to identify strategies for the development and implementation of standardized insecticide resistance management, also to allow comparisons across nations and across time, and to define research priorities for control of vectors of arboviruses. The workshop brought together 163 participants from 28 nationalities and was accessible, live, through the web (> 70,000 web-accesses over 3 days). © 2017 The Author(s).
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