PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Community-based control of the brown dog tick in a region with high rates of Rocky Mountain spotted fever, 2012-2013.

  • Naomi Drexler,
  • Mark Miller,
  • Justin Gerding,
  • Suzanne Todd,
  • Laura Adams,
  • F Scott Dahlgren,
  • Nelva Bryant,
  • Erica Weis,
  • Kristen Herrick,
  • Jessica Francies,
  • Kenneth Komatsu,
  • Stephen Piontkowski,
  • Jose Velascosoltero,
  • Timothy Shelhamer,
  • Brian Hamilton,
  • Carmen Eribes,
  • Anita Brock,
  • Patsy Sneezy,
  • Cye Goseyun,
  • Harty Bendle,
  • Regina Hovet,
  • Velda Williams,
  • Robert Massung,
  • Jennifer H McQuiston

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112368
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
p. e112368

Abstract

Read online

Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) transmitted by the brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato) has emerged as a significant public health risk on American Indian reservations in eastern Arizona. During 2003-2012, more than 250 RMSF cases and 19 deaths were documented among Arizona's American Indian population. The high case fatality rate makes community-level interventions aimed at rapid and sustained reduction of ticks urgent. Beginning in 2012, a two year pilot integrated tick prevention campaign called the RMSF Rodeo was launched in a ∼ 600-home tribal community with high rates of RMSF. During year one, long-acting tick collars were placed on all dogs in the community, environmental acaricides were applied to yards monthly, and animal care practices such as spay and neuter and proper tethering procedures were encouraged. Tick levels, indicated by visible inspection of dogs, tick traps and homeowner reports were used to monitor tick presence and evaluate the efficacy of interventions throughout the project. By the end of year one, <1% of dogs in the RMSF Rodeo community had visible tick infestations five months after the project was started, compared to 64% of dogs in Non-Rodeo communities, and environmental tick levels were reduced below detectable levels. The second year of the project focused on use of the long-acting collar alone and achieved sustained tick control with fewer than 3% of dogs in the RMSF Rodeo community with visible tick infestations by the end of the second year. Homeowner reports of tick activity in the domestic and peridomestic setting showed similar decreases in tick activity compared to the non-project communities. Expansion of this successful project to other areas with Rhipicephalus-transmitted RMSF has the potential to reduce brown dog tick infestations and save human lives.