DutchNews, December 12, 2015
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| A house in Tanzinia fitted with the eave tubes. Photo: In2Care |
A Dutch company has a key role in a malaria
prevention project funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the
tune of €9m.
Wageningen-based In2Care is part of the five-year project which is
being coordinated by Penn State University researchers. The aim is to
investigate a new method for preventing the transmission of malaria.
The method
involves limiting mosquito access to houses by screening windows and installing
tubes under the eaves that contain a unique type of insecticide-laced netting
developed by In2Care.
The beauty of the technology is that the people living in
the house don’t have to do anything. ‘It is passive technology,’ In2Care
director Bart Knols said. The netting in the tubes requires replacing every few
months but the system is low cost and suitable for most types of African
houses.
An earlier project, funded by the EU, showed the tubes reduced indoor
mosquito densities by up to 90%.
The London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine and the Institut Pierre Richet in Ivory Coast are also involved in the
project.

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