Insecticides are one of the cheapest, most effective, and best proven methods of controlling malaria, but mosquitoes can rapidly evolve resistance. Such evolution, first seen in the 1950s in areas of widespread DDT use, is a major challenge because attempts to comprehensively control and even eliminate malaria rely heavily on indoor house spraying and insecticide-treated bed nets. Current strategies for dealing with resistance evolution are expensive and open ended, and their sustainability has yet to be demonstrated. Here we show that if insecticides targeted old mosquitoes, and ideally old malaria-infected mosquitoes, they could provide effective malaria control while only weakly selecting for resistance. This alone would greatly enhance ...
Abstract Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Af...
Since 2000, the world has made significant progress in reducing malaria morbidity an...
We use mathematical models to explore the evolutionary implications of health interventions affectin...
PublishedArticleOpen Access Article - published version.Insecticides are one of the cheapest, most e...
mosquitoes would be a more sustainable way of controlling malaria, according to entomologists who ad...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide resistance would be a major breakthrough for the c...
There is considerable interest in the management of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes. One possib...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide-resistance would be a major breakthrough for the co...
There is considerable interest in the management of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes. One possib...
Insecticides that kill mosquitoes have helped to fight malaria, but insecticide resistance is rising...
Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Africa. Whi...
Malaria vectors have developed resistance to all classes of insecticides that are used to target the...
Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Africa. Whi...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide-resistance would be a major breakthrough for the co...
Despite our efforts at malaria control, malaria remains one of our most serious and deadly diseases....
Abstract Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Af...
Since 2000, the world has made significant progress in reducing malaria morbidity an...
We use mathematical models to explore the evolutionary implications of health interventions affectin...
PublishedArticleOpen Access Article - published version.Insecticides are one of the cheapest, most e...
mosquitoes would be a more sustainable way of controlling malaria, according to entomologists who ad...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide resistance would be a major breakthrough for the c...
There is considerable interest in the management of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes. One possib...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide-resistance would be a major breakthrough for the co...
There is considerable interest in the management of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes. One possib...
Insecticides that kill mosquitoes have helped to fight malaria, but insecticide resistance is rising...
Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Africa. Whi...
Malaria vectors have developed resistance to all classes of insecticides that are used to target the...
Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Africa. Whi...
Finding a way to block the evolution insecticide-resistance would be a major breakthrough for the co...
Despite our efforts at malaria control, malaria remains one of our most serious and deadly diseases....
Abstract Background There has recently been a substantial decline in malaria incidence in much of Af...
Since 2000, the world has made significant progress in reducing malaria morbidity an...
We use mathematical models to explore the evolutionary implications of health interventions affectin...