Remember the following key points about malaria transmission from previous study sessions:

The implications of these facts are that:

Measures that rely on using insect-killing insecticides against the adult (flying) mosquitoes inside houses (spraying and using insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs), mean that the mosquitoes must be susceptible to the chemicals if the controls are to be successful. Moreover, they kill only the mosquitoes that enter houses to bite people. However, you learned previously that some mosquitoes can bite people outside houses and transmit malaria. So we are starting the three sessions on malaria prevention with larval control for the following reasons:

  1. Larval control is the first line of defense in malaria prevention and presents your first chance of breaking the malaria transmission cycle.
  2. The mosquito larvae are not flying insects; it is easy to find the water collections where they are developing to become the adult mosquitoes that will start biting people and transmitting malaria.
  3. If people in your village get sick and die of malaria, you have to implement more expensive and complicated mosquito prevention and curative measures to protect the community.
  4. Many of the larval control measures are inexpensive; they can be implemented by educating, mobilising and coordinating community members to clean their environment.
  5. Compared to other measures, the chemical methods of larval control are also not very expensive and are simple enough to be applied by you.