Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of a spatial repellent on malaria incidence in an area of western Kenya characterised by high malaria transmission, insecticide resistance, and universal coverage of insecticide treated nets (part of the AEGIS Consortium): a cluster-randomised, controlled trial

Eric Ochomo, John E. Gimnig, Quentin Awori, Bernard Abong’o, Prisca A. Oria, Nickline K. Ashitiba, Brian Polo, Vincent Moshi, Hilda Otanga, Ferdinard Adungo, Eunice Ouma, Susan Outa, Edith Ramaita, Rebecca Levine, Wycliffe Odongo, Steven A. Harvey, April Monroe, Ashley Hudson, Bradley Sandberg, Jared Hendrickson, Xingyuan Zhao, Ruyu Zhou, Fang Liu, Nicole L. Achee, John P. Grieco

2024The Lancet38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Topics & Concepts

MalariaInsecticide resistanceIncidence (geometry)ToxicologyAnophelesTransmission (telecommunications)Protozoal diseaseMosquito controlBiologyVirologyGeographyVeterinary medicineMedicineImmunologyEngineeringMathematicsTelecommunicationsGeometryMalaria Research and ControlMosquito-borne diseases and controlInsect Pest Control Strategies
Effect of a spatial repellent on malaria incidence in an area of western Kenya characterised by high malaria transmission, insecticide resistance, and universal coverage of insecticide treated nets (part of the AEGIS Consortium): a cluster-randomised, controlled trial | Litcius