Devising and Using Evaluation Standards: The French Paradox

2018 ◽  
pp. 21-39
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Barbier
Author(s):  
Mara Moreno-Gómez ◽  
Rubén Bueno-Marí ◽  
Andrea Drago ◽  
Miguel A Miranda

Abstract Vector-borne diseases are a worldwide threat to human health. Often, no vaccines or treatments exist. Thus, personal protection products play an essential role in limiting transmission. The World Health Organization (WHO) arm-in-cage (AIC) test is the most common method for evaluating the efficacy of topical repellents, but it remains unclear whether AIC testing conditions recreate the mosquito landing rates in the field. This study aimed to estimate the landing rate outdoors, in an area of Europe highly infested with the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus (Skuse, 1894, Diptera: Culididae)), and to determine how to replicate this rate in the laboratory. To assess the landing rate in the field, 16 individuals were exposed to mosquitoes in a highly infested region of Italy. These field results were then compared to results obtained in the laboratory: 1) in a 30 m3 room where nine volunteers were exposed to different mosquito abundances (ranges: 15–20, 25–30, and 45–50) and 2) in a 0.064 m3 AIC test cage where 10 individuals exposed their arms to 200 mosquitoes (as per WHO requirements). The highest mosquito landing rate in the field was 26.8 landings/min. In the room test, a similar landing rate was achieved using 15–20 mosquitoes (density: 0.50–0.66 mosquitoes/m3) and an exposure time of 3 min. In the AIC test using 200 mosquitoes (density: 3,125 mosquitoes/m3), the landing rate was 229 ± 48 landings/min. This study provides useful reference values that can be employed to design new evaluation standards for topical repellents that better simulate field conditions.


2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 113
Author(s):  
Anna Frisinghelli ◽  
Aleardo Koverech ◽  
Masa Messano ◽  
Alessandro Peschechera ◽  
Mauro Giorgio Giarrizzo ◽  
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Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-154
Author(s):  
Dung Tran Anh

On the basis of theoretical and practical research from the investigation of speed strength evaluation criteria for female athletes (athletes) Pencak silat aged 14-15 in Tuyen Quang province. We conduct research and application to build speed strength evaluation criteria for female Pencak silat athletes aged 14-15 in Tuyen Quang province to contribute to the formation of a system of strength evaluation standards. The speed for female athletes Pencak silat in Tuyen Quang province in general and Pencak silat athletes aged 14-15 in particular is consistent with the training characteristics of Tuyen Quang province. We have researched and selected 6 reliable and informative tests on research subjects and built 2 classification tables and 2 standard scoreboards to evaluate speed strength for women. (Athlete) Pencak silat aged 14-15, the youth team of Tuyen Quang province.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 404-419
Author(s):  
Caitlin Blaser Mapitsa ◽  
Tara Polzer Ngwato

As global discussions of evaluation standards become more contextually nuanced, culturally responsive conceptions of ethics have not been sufficiently discussed. In academic social research, ethical clearance processes have been designed to protect vulnerable people from harm related to participation in a research project. This article expands the ambit of ethical protection thinking and proposes a relational ethics approach for evaluation practitioners. This centers an analysis of power relations among and within all the different stakeholder groups in order to establish, in a context-specific manner, which stakeholders are vulnerable and in need of protection. The approach also contextualizes the nature of “the public good,” as part of an ethical consideration of interest trade-offs during evaluations. The discussion is informed by our experiences in African contexts and speaks to the “Made in Africa” research agenda but is also relevant to other global contexts where alternatives to “developed country” ontological assumptions about the roles of researchers and participations and the nature of vulnerability are being reconsidered.


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