Today’s Solutions: April 28, 2024

Not only do bed nets help protect people against mosquito bites, but if those nets are treated with an insecticide, they also kill any of the insects that touch them. A simple new technology could make such nets much more lethal to mosquitoes, yet also safer for humans.

Utilizing video tracking systems developed with engineers from the University of Warwick, scientists at Britain’s Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine started by analyzing the manner in which mosquitoes fly around conventional bed nets. What they found was that the insects spend a lot of time over the top of the nets, flying back and forth. In order to place an obstacle in that flight path, the researchers developed what’s known as the Barrier Bednet.

There’s actually not much to the device, as it’s simply a rectangular panel of insecticide-treated netting that protrudes vertically from the top of a conventional bed net. It very much gets in the mosquitoes’ way, though. This causes them to collide with it, exposing a greater total number of insects to the insecticide. In fact, field tests conducted in Burkina Faso showed the Barrier Bednet to be highly effective at killing malaria-spreading Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes.

This was the case even when only it, and not the rest of the bed net, was treated with insecticide. That’s an important consideration, given that mosquitoes are becoming increasingly resistant to the traditionally-used pyrethroid class of insecticides. As a result, harsher and potentially more human-unfriendly insecticides may be needed. If those can be located up and away from peoples’ beds – on the Barrier Bednet – there’s less chance of those people being exposed to them.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

The fight against malaria improves thanks to innovative mosquito bed nets tha...

Malaria, a mosquito-borne disease, remains a substantial public health threat, particularly in endemic areas. However, recent trials have produced encouraging results, implying that new ...

Read More

Mongolia signs historic climate finance deal to protect grasslands

Mongolia's government and a coalition of partners signed a pioneering nature financing deal, marking a watershed moment in environmental protection. This historic agreement seeks ...

Read More

How to be a better conversationalist

A meaningful conversation is the best way to build a connection with someone, but simply conjuring up such a conversation is not always easy—especially ...

Read More

Hubble takes beautiful image of galaxies “dancing”

The Hubble Space Telescope ventured into space over three decades ago in 1990, and has observed around 50,000 celestial bodies to date. During this ...

Read More