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Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial

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Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial. / Orange, Erica; Arnzen, Annie; Muluma, Chuma et al.
In: Malaria Journal, Vol. 23, No. 1, 240, 12.08.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Orange, E, Arnzen, A, Muluma, C, Akalalambili, S, Tobolo, T, Ndalama, F, Chishya, C, Saili, K, Ashton, RA, Eisele, TP, Yukich, J, Kyomuhangi, I, Miller, J, Silumbe, K, Chanda, J, Hamainza, B, Wagman, J, Slutsker, L, Burkot, TR & Littrell, M 2024, 'Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial', Malaria Journal, vol. 23, no. 1, 240. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w

APA

Orange, E., Arnzen, A., Muluma, C., Akalalambili, S., Tobolo, T., Ndalama, F., Chishya, C., Saili, K., Ashton, R. A., Eisele, T. P., Yukich, J., Kyomuhangi, I., Miller, J., Silumbe, K., Chanda, J., Hamainza, B., Wagman, J., Slutsker, L., Burkot, T. R., & Littrell, M. (2024). Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial. Malaria Journal, 23(1), Article 240. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w

Vancouver

Orange E, Arnzen A, Muluma C, Akalalambili S, Tobolo T, Ndalama F et al. Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial. Malaria Journal. 2024 Aug 12;23(1):240. doi: 10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w

Author

Orange, Erica ; Arnzen, Annie ; Muluma, Chuma et al. / Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial. In: Malaria Journal. 2024 ; Vol. 23, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{d87728bf030942c292b9b7e0d17d21db,
title = "Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial",
abstract = "Background: Community acceptance is an important criterion to assess in community trials, particularly for new tools that require high coverage and use by a target population. Installed on exterior walls of household structures, the attractive targeted sugar bait (ATSB) is a new vector control tool designed to attract and kill mosquitoes. ATSBs were evaluated in Western Zambia during a two-year cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of ATSBs in reducing malaria transmission. Community acceptance of ATSBs was critical for successful trial implementation. Methods: A community engagement strategy outlined activities and key messages to promote acceptance. Annual cross-sectional surveys, conducted during the peak transmission period, assessed households for presence of ATSBs as well as perceived benefits, concerns, and willingness to use ATSBs. Sixteen focus group discussions and 16 in-depth interviews, conducted at the end of each ATSB station deployment period, obtained a range of perceptions and household experiences with ATSB stations, as well as ITN use in the context of ATSB deployment. Results: Methods used during the study to promote acceptance and continued use of ATSBs were effective in achieving greater than 90% coverage, a high (greater than 70%) level of perceived benefits, and fewer than 10% of households reporting safety concerns. Common facilitators of acceptance included the desire for protection against malaria and reduction of mosquitoes, trust in health initiatives, and understanding of the product. Common barriers to acceptance included misconceptions of product impact on mosquitoes, continued cases of malaria, association with satanism, and damage to household structures. Discussion: Future use of the ATSB intervention will likely require activities that foster community acceptance before, during, and after the intervention is introduced. Additional research may be needed to understand the impact of different levels of community engagement on ATSB station coverage, ATSB station perception, and ITN use. Conclusion: There was high acceptance of ATSB stations during the trial in Western Zambia. Continuous and intense community engagement efforts contributed to sustained ATSB coverage and trust in the product. Acceptance of ATSBs during programmatic delivery requires further research.",
keywords = "Community acceptance, Malaria, Attractive targeted sugar bait",
author = "Erica Orange and Annie Arnzen and Chuma Muluma and Situmbeko Akalalambili and Titus Tobolo and Frank Ndalama and Chama Chishya and Kochelani Saili and Ashton, {Ruth A.} and Eisele, {Thomas P.} and Joshua Yukich and Irene Kyomuhangi and John Miller and Kafula Silumbe and Javan Chanda and Busiku Hamainza and Joseph Wagman and Laurence Slutsker and Burkot, {Thomas R.} and Megan Littrell",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "Malaria Journal",
issn = "1475-2875",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Community acceptance of a novel malaria intervention, Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits, in the Zambia phase III trial

AU - Orange, Erica

AU - Arnzen, Annie

AU - Muluma, Chuma

AU - Akalalambili, Situmbeko

AU - Tobolo, Titus

AU - Ndalama, Frank

AU - Chishya, Chama

AU - Saili, Kochelani

AU - Ashton, Ruth A.

AU - Eisele, Thomas P.

AU - Yukich, Joshua

AU - Kyomuhangi, Irene

AU - Miller, John

AU - Silumbe, Kafula

AU - Chanda, Javan

AU - Hamainza, Busiku

AU - Wagman, Joseph

AU - Slutsker, Laurence

AU - Burkot, Thomas R.

AU - Littrell, Megan

PY - 2024/8/12

Y1 - 2024/8/12

N2 - Background: Community acceptance is an important criterion to assess in community trials, particularly for new tools that require high coverage and use by a target population. Installed on exterior walls of household structures, the attractive targeted sugar bait (ATSB) is a new vector control tool designed to attract and kill mosquitoes. ATSBs were evaluated in Western Zambia during a two-year cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of ATSBs in reducing malaria transmission. Community acceptance of ATSBs was critical for successful trial implementation. Methods: A community engagement strategy outlined activities and key messages to promote acceptance. Annual cross-sectional surveys, conducted during the peak transmission period, assessed households for presence of ATSBs as well as perceived benefits, concerns, and willingness to use ATSBs. Sixteen focus group discussions and 16 in-depth interviews, conducted at the end of each ATSB station deployment period, obtained a range of perceptions and household experiences with ATSB stations, as well as ITN use in the context of ATSB deployment. Results: Methods used during the study to promote acceptance and continued use of ATSBs were effective in achieving greater than 90% coverage, a high (greater than 70%) level of perceived benefits, and fewer than 10% of households reporting safety concerns. Common facilitators of acceptance included the desire for protection against malaria and reduction of mosquitoes, trust in health initiatives, and understanding of the product. Common barriers to acceptance included misconceptions of product impact on mosquitoes, continued cases of malaria, association with satanism, and damage to household structures. Discussion: Future use of the ATSB intervention will likely require activities that foster community acceptance before, during, and after the intervention is introduced. Additional research may be needed to understand the impact of different levels of community engagement on ATSB station coverage, ATSB station perception, and ITN use. Conclusion: There was high acceptance of ATSB stations during the trial in Western Zambia. Continuous and intense community engagement efforts contributed to sustained ATSB coverage and trust in the product. Acceptance of ATSBs during programmatic delivery requires further research.

AB - Background: Community acceptance is an important criterion to assess in community trials, particularly for new tools that require high coverage and use by a target population. Installed on exterior walls of household structures, the attractive targeted sugar bait (ATSB) is a new vector control tool designed to attract and kill mosquitoes. ATSBs were evaluated in Western Zambia during a two-year cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of ATSBs in reducing malaria transmission. Community acceptance of ATSBs was critical for successful trial implementation. Methods: A community engagement strategy outlined activities and key messages to promote acceptance. Annual cross-sectional surveys, conducted during the peak transmission period, assessed households for presence of ATSBs as well as perceived benefits, concerns, and willingness to use ATSBs. Sixteen focus group discussions and 16 in-depth interviews, conducted at the end of each ATSB station deployment period, obtained a range of perceptions and household experiences with ATSB stations, as well as ITN use in the context of ATSB deployment. Results: Methods used during the study to promote acceptance and continued use of ATSBs were effective in achieving greater than 90% coverage, a high (greater than 70%) level of perceived benefits, and fewer than 10% of households reporting safety concerns. Common facilitators of acceptance included the desire for protection against malaria and reduction of mosquitoes, trust in health initiatives, and understanding of the product. Common barriers to acceptance included misconceptions of product impact on mosquitoes, continued cases of malaria, association with satanism, and damage to household structures. Discussion: Future use of the ATSB intervention will likely require activities that foster community acceptance before, during, and after the intervention is introduced. Additional research may be needed to understand the impact of different levels of community engagement on ATSB station coverage, ATSB station perception, and ITN use. Conclusion: There was high acceptance of ATSB stations during the trial in Western Zambia. Continuous and intense community engagement efforts contributed to sustained ATSB coverage and trust in the product. Acceptance of ATSBs during programmatic delivery requires further research.

KW - Community acceptance

KW - Malaria

KW - Attractive targeted sugar bait

U2 - 10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w

DO - 10.1186/s12936-024-05068-w

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

JO - Malaria Journal

JF - Malaria Journal

SN - 1475-2875

IS - 1

M1 - 240

ER -