NACCHO Report: Shifting Our Approach to Mosquito Control Capabilities in the U.S.

Oct 16, 2017 | Kim Rodgers

The State of Mosquito Control in the U.S.
Mosquito-borne diseases are an ongoing public health concern in the United States, but there seems to be a cyclical pattern when it comes to prioritizing mosquito control capabilities. First, a newly-emerging or re-emerging mosquito-borne disease outbreak triggers a pandemic or epidemic response in which municipalities, states, and countries request resources to support and improve local mosquito control. As a result, local capacity increases as staff are hired, training expands, diagnostic tests are developed, vaccine therapies are pursued, partnerships are established, and the threat is faced head-on. But then the seasons change, mosquito populations decrease, the sense of urgency fades, and the perceived threat lessens. Consequently, funding and resources dwindle or are withdrawn; local vector control programs are left understaffed, undertrained, and underfunded; and the public is left vulnerable to the next impending mosquito-borne disease threat. This pattern has been seen in the past with West Nile Virus (WNV) and is threatening to repeat itself following the Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak of 2015-2017.

WNV was introduced to the United States in 1999. At that time, no federal funding existed to support local mosquito surveillance and control, and there was no nationally coordinated response to the threat. Following WNV, which is now an endemic health problem currently circulating in all 48 contiguous United States, funding for mosquito control increased and guidelines were developed to ensure a concerted effort against WNV and other mosquito-borne diseases. However, since 2004, funding for mosquito control efforts has dropped more than 60 percent, causing ripple effects in staffing, surveillance, and control activities. As a result, many local mosquito control programs may have been ill-equipped to respond to ZIKV. Controlling the spread of mosquito- and tick-borne diseases (vector-borne disease) like WNV and ZIKV is the responsibility of a variety of departments across the country, including local health departments (LHDs), yet little data exists on these departments’ level of preparedness.

Establishing a Baseline of Local Vector Control
To bridge this research gap, the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO), in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), developed and distributed an electronic survey to assess mosquito surveillance and control capacity among the nearly 2,000 local vector control programs nationwide. The responses were scored, quantitatively, by 10 evidence-based activities essential to a competent vector control program:

  • Five core competencies were assessed, including:
    1. Routine mosquito surveillance, standardized trapping, and species identification;
    2. Larviciding and adulticiding capabilities;
    3. Routine vector control (e.g., chemical, biological, source reduction, or environmental management);
    4. Species-specific abatement activities; and
    5. Pesticide resistance testing.
  • Five supplemental competencies were also assessed, including:
    1. Licensed pesticide application requirements;
    2. Non-chemical vector control;
    3. Community outreach and education activities;
    4. Communication with LHDs on surveillance and epidemiology; and
    5. Cooperation with nearby/partner vector control programs.

Using the CDC framework for vector control competency, the five core competencies were weighed to rank each organization as fully capable, competent, or needs improvement.

A total of 1,083 vector control organizations completed the assessment for a response rate of 53%. These responses came from LHDs (53%), mosquito control districts (20%), and the remaining 27% from other city/local governmental agencies (e.g., public works, streets and sanitation, Tribal networks, environmental health, parish police juries, parks and recreation, weed and pest, and utilities). The respondents ranked 8% fully capable, 4% competent, and 84% needs improvement. Of the vector control programs ranked as needs improvement, all of them lack the capability or capacity to perform pesticide resistance testing and more than half (52%) lack competency in performing routine surveillance and species identification.

The assessment also revealed top vector control priorities:

  1. Pesticide resistance testing;
  2. Treating based on surveillance data;
  3. Routine mosquito surveillance and species identification;
  4. Routine, species-specific vector control;
  5. Larviciding and/or adulticiding; and
  6. Non-chemical vector control (e.g., biological, source reduction, water management).

The full baseline assessment gathers previously unavailable data on local mosquito surveillance and control in the United States. A majority of local departments reported significant gaps in programmatic activities, indicating significant susceptibility to mosquito-borne diseases like WNV and ZIKV. By identifying these gaps, this assessment enables local, state, and federal agencies and their partners to prioritize and develop targeted approaches, and regulatory and legislative solutions, for improving vector control programs.

Recommendations for Improving Local Vector Control
Based on the assessment data, mosquito control in the U.S. needs sweeping improvements. NACCHO recommends several measures to increase mosquito surveillance and control capacity, including: forming mosquito control districts; providing quality and ongoing staff training in standard mosquito surveillance and control techniques; and ensuring sustainable funding and resources are dedicated to local vector control programs and mosquito control districts. Since this assessment also revealed many gaps in mosquito surveillance and control, NACCHO also recommends decreasing barriers to competency by: identifying the barriers to routine mosquito surveillance and pesticide resistance testing; supporting data collection and sharing across jurisdictions to monitor mosquito species and density over time and pre-/post-control activities; and ensuring all mosquito control decisions are supported by surveillance data and appropriate thresholds.

Further, NACCHO’s mosquito control policy statement supports federal, state, and local funding for LHDs and mosquito control agencies to provide technical assistance, education, and research to support integrated mosquito management programs designed to benefit or cause minimal harm to people, domestic animals, wildlife, and the environment. NACCHO supports local efforts to improve mosquito surveillance and control capacity by releasing the results of this assessment – an expansion of the previous priority area assessment; convening a Vector Control workgroup to guide and develop technical assistance for locals; creating a Vector Control Toolkit to be released in November 2017 within NACCHO’s Toolbox; and hosting a Vector Control Summit in early 2018 to provide hands-on training, sharing sessions, and presentations from national and local subject matter experts.

For additional resources, check out NACCHO’s Vector Control webpage and Zika Infographic.

To learn more about this study, contact NACCHO’s Environmental Health Team.


About Kim Rodgers

Pronouns: She/Her

Kim Rodgers was formerly the Communications Manager at NACCHO.

More posts by Kim Rodgers

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