Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Mar 2018)

Successes and failures of sixty years of vector control in French Guiana: what is the next step?

  • Yanouk Epelboin,
  • Sarah C Chaney,
  • Amandine Guidez,
  • Nausicaa Habchi-Hanriot,
  • Stanislas Talaga,
  • Lanjiao Wang,
  • Isabelle Dusfour

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0074-02760170398
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 113, no. 5

Abstract

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Since the 1940s, French Guiana has implemented vector control to contain or eliminate malaria, yellow fever, and, recently, dengue, chikungunya, and Zika. Over time, strategies have evolved depending on the location, efficacy of the methods, development of insecticide resistance, and advances in vector control techniques. This review summarises the history of vector control in French Guiana by reporting the records found in the private archives of the Institute Pasteur in French Guiana and those accessible in libraries worldwide. This publication highlights successes and failures in vector control and identifies the constraints and expectations for vector control in this French overseas territory in the Americas.

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