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1

Khan, Shane. Who uses insecticide-treated mosquito nets?: A comparison of seven countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Calverton, MD: Macro International, 2008.

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2

Bakote'e, Bernard. Insecticide treated mosquito nets: The Solomon Islands experience. Solomon Islands: [s.n.], 1997.

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3

Division, Montana Environmental Management. Mosquito control training manual. Helena, Mont: The Division, 1986.

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4

La lutte contre les moustiques nuisants et vecteurs de maladies: L'évaluation de nouveaux insecticides utilisables contre les moustiques en Afrique tropicale. Paris: Ed. Karthala, 1998.

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5

Johnson, Art. Methoprene concentrations in surface water samples from Grant County Mosquito Control District No. 1. Olympia, WA: Washington State Dept. of Ecology, 2006.

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6

Rwanda Biomedical Center. Malaria & Other Parasitic Diseases Division. Guidelines for the supply, distribution and management of long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) in Rwanda: Amabwiliza arebana no kohereza inzitiramibu kumavuriro, imicungire yazo, n'uko zitangwa. Kigali: rbc, Rwanda Biomedical Center, Malaria & Other Parasitic Diseases Division, 2010.

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7

Coalition Against Malaria in Ethiopia. Effect of a combined use of mosquito repellent and insecticide treated net on malaria prevalence in southern Ethiopia: A cluster randomized controlled trial. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: Malaria Consortium Ethiopia, 2009.

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8

Washington (State). Dept. of Ecology. Water Quality Program., ed. Best management practices for mosquito control. Olympia, WA: The Dept., 2004.

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9

Jacqueline, Cattani, Lengeler Christian, Savigny Don de, International Development Research Centre (Canada), and World Health Organization, eds. Net gain: A new method for preventing malaria deaths. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 1996.

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10

Naturally Bug-Free: 75 Nontoxic Recipes for Repelling Mosquitoes, Ticks, Fleas, Ants, Moths & Other Pesky Insects. Storey Publishing, LLC, 2016.

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11

Washington (State). Dept. of Ecology. Water Quality Program. and Washington (State). Dept. of Ecology., eds. Best management practices for mosquito control. Olympia, WA: Washington State Dept. of Ecology, 2004.

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12

Gould, E. A. Mosquito-borne arboviruses. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198570028.003.0039.

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The arboviruses are all single-stranded RNA viruses, although they belong to four different viral families. Several important human pathogens belong to the mosquito-borne arboviruses including yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis and Rift Valley Fever. They cause a wide range of illnesses from unrecognised infection to severe systemic disease with hemorrhagic complications and encephalitis with a high mortality similar range of illnesses is seen in infected animals.Arboviruses have several unique characteristics, these include; an ability to infect and be transmitted by mosquitos, ticks, midges, sand flies, bugs, fleas, blackflies and horseflies. They infect vertebrate hosts which may amplify virus for invertebrate vectors that feed on infected vertebrates. An ability to replicate in anthropods, with little pathology and in vertebrates often with significant pathology. Many arboviruses are Zoonotic.Control methods depend on the epidemiology of particular viruses, but epidemic vector control through control of insect breeding sites and the use of insecticide spraying have been successfully used in the past. Effective vaccines are available for yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis.
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13

Organization, World Health, ed. Vanuatu insecticide impregnated mosquito bed net project for malaria control: Donors report 1999. Port Vila: Ministry of Health, 1999.

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14

World Health Organization. Division of Control of Tropical Diseases., ed. The impact of permethrin and deltamethrin resistance in Anopheles gambiae s.s. on the efficacy of insecticide-treated mosquito nets. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1999.

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15

(Foreword), Harold M. Koenig, ed. Malaria & the Ddt Story (Occasional Paper, 117). Inst of Economic Affairs, 2001.

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