Long-lasting dengue prevention method to be launched | Daily News

Long-lasting dengue prevention method to be launched

A self-sustaining programme that helps provide long-term protection for communities from dengue is to be launched in Sri Lanka soon.

Monash University’s World Mosquito Program (WMP) is set to be rolled out in Sri Lanka following the signing of a Collaboration Agreement (CA) by Secretary, Ministry of Health (MoH), Janaka Sugathadasa at a ceremony in Colombo with Australian High Commissioner Bryce Hutchesson.

The agreement advances the partnership between Sri Lanka and the WMP in tackling the threat of mosquito borne-viruses such as dengue in Sri Lanka.

It comes after Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop’s announcement last year of the AUD 1 million partnership and funding commitment to help establish the WMP in Sri Lanka.

With support from the Australian Government’s innovation Xchange, WMP will use its ground-breaking research to trial the introduction of naturally occurring Wolbachia bacteria to Sri Lankan mosquito populations.

Wolbachia prevents dengue from being transmitted between people and also has the ability to block other mosquito-borne diseases such as Zika and Chikungunya.

WMP Program Director Professor Scott O’Neill said the agreement was an important step in establishing the programme in Sri Lanka.“We are extremely pleased to be working with the National Dengue Control Unit, Ministry of Health, in seeking a long-term solution to the dengue burden in Sri Lanka. We look forward to rolling out the program to local communities in the Colombo area,” he said.

“Mosquito-borne viruses pose a global health threat for a number of reasons and our program provides an affordable solution to improving health security in the region.”The program will be established across three sites in the Colombo area over the next 12 months, with the first mosquito releases to take place next year.

It’s hoped the programme will expand its Wolbachia method to further sites in Sri Lanka in the future working in collaboration with local partners and subject to approval from the Sri Lankan Ministry of Health.

Since 2011, WMP has been conducting field trials using the Wolbachia method. Long term monitoring has shown that when a high proportion of mosquitoes in an area carry Wolbachia, local transmission of the disease has stopped.

Sri Lanka is the tenth country to become part of the program, joining Brazil, Colombia, Australia, Indonesia, Vietnam, India, Fiji, Vanuatu and Kiribati.Working to help protect the global community from mosquito-borne diseases, the World Mosquito Program (WMP), formerly the Eliminate Dengue Program (EDP, is a not-for- profit initiative led from Monash University, Australia.

It uses a safe, natural and effective method to reduce the threat of viruses such as Zika, dengue and Chikungunya. Through collaborative and innovative approach, WMP helps protect local communities from these diseases in Australia, Asia, Latin America, and the Pacific Islands.


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