TEXAS - A collaborative, grant-funded program called Vector Educational Center for Training, Outreach and Resources( VECTOR) aims to expand and improve control capacity against vector-borne diseases across Texas and Louisiana.
A vector-borne disease is one transmitted to humans and animals by blood feeders like ticks and mosquitoes. The City of New Orleans Mosquito Control Board, in partnership with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, received a five-year grant totaling more than $8 million, about $1.6 million per year, from the CDC. The funding will buttress regional outreach efforts focused on mosquito abatement by creating the Gulf Shores VECTOR program.
The VECTOR program’s leaders are principal investigator Claudia Riegel, Ph.D., with the City of New Orleans Mosquito, Termite and Rodent Control Board and Janet Hurley, AgriLife Extension integrated pest management specialist, Dallas. Their plan is to educate the public and municipal decision-makers, and to train public and private pest management professionals.
The grant came from an $8 billion investment by the CDC to support local public health departments and pest control programs across the country against vectors like mosquitoes, flies, ticks and fleas.
“This grant is a large investment,” Hurley said. “Over the past couple of decades, we’ve seen a surge in bubonic plague, dengue fever, anthrax and other diseases that were considered eradicated. COVID-19 also exposed vulnerabilities on the infectious disease front. As a result, they are ramping up efforts to take more of a proactive approach to public health, and vector management is a big part of that.”
“We are working with everybody,” Hurley said. “We’re working with partners and building partnerships by engaging with stakeholders from Texas, Louisiana and across the southeast. We want to get everyone on the same page and working toward the same goal.”
Bringing awareness, control capacity to vector-borne diseases
She said the goal is to raise awareness within the general public and among local leaders like mayors, city council members, county commissioners and school board members who make decisions regarding pest abatement program funding.
Latest from Pest Control Technology
- Watch: Abell Pest Control Holds Snap Trap Challenge
- PMP’s Encouraged to ‘Move at the Speed of Technology’ at Purdue Conference
- Bug Off Pest Control Center to Supply NYC with Evolve
- Envu Earns EcoVadis Gold Rating for Sustainability Leadership
- Meet The Cluster Fly
- University of Central Florida Appoints Tony Massey to Board of Trustees
- The Great Skunk Hunt
- Rentokil Named One of Britain’s Most Admired Companies