Community-based integrated tick management programs: cost and feasibility scenarios

Author:

Schulze Terry L1,Eisen Lars2,Russell Katie3,Jordan Robert A4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Terry L. Schulze, Ph.D., Inc. , 9 Evergreen Court, Perrineville, NJ 08535 , USA

2. Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , 3156 Rampart Road, Fort Collins, CO 80521 , USA

3. 525 4th Street, B1, Brooklyn, NY 11215, USA

4. Monmouth County Mosquito Control Division , 1901 Wayside Road, Tinton Falls, NJ 07724 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Numerous studies have assessed the efficacy of environmentally based control methods to suppress populations of the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis Say), but few of these estimated the cost of control. We estimated costs for a range of tick control methods (including habitat management, deer exclusion or population reduction, broadcast of acaricides, and use of host-targeted acaricides) implemented singly or in combination and applied to a model community comprising 320 residential properties and parklands. Using the high end for cost ranges, tick control based on a single method was estimated to have mean annual costs per household in the model community ranging from $132 for treating only forest ecotone with a broadcast synthetic acaricide to kill host-seeking ticks (or $404 for treating all residential forested habitat) to >$2,000 for deployment of bait boxes (SELECT TCS) across all residential tick habitat to treat rodents topically with acaricide to kill infesting ticks. Combining different sets of multiple methods in an integrated tick management program placed the annual cost between $508 and 3,192 annually per household in the model community, underscoring the disconnect between what people in Lyme disease endemic areas say they are willing to pay for tick control (not more than $100–150 annually) and the actual costs for tick control. Additional barriers to implementing community-based tick management programs within residential communities are discussed.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Insect Science,General Veterinary,Parasitology

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