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This article provides helpful tips on how to protect yourself from mosquitos and ticks, including avoiding areas with dense mosquito populations, using protective clothing, and using EPA-registered insect repellents on exposed skin. It also discusses the different types of active ingredients in repellents and the importance of using EPA-registered ones. The article addresses common misconceptions and concerns about the safety and effectiveness of repellents and concludes with recommendations for specific populations, such as pregnant women and children.
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Personal Protection • Avoid areas with dense mosquito populations (wet, wooded, etc.) • Avoid the peak times for mosquitoes: two hours before & after dawn & dusk • Use clothing as a protective barrier • Use EPA-registered insect repellents on exposed skin
Why Repellents? • Help prevent mosquito- and tick-borne disease • Repellent use decreased risk by 2x in a case-controlled study in Australia (Harley, et al., 2005) • Respondents with no/infrequent insect repellent use 2x more likely to have evidence of past dengue infection vs. those using always/often in Matamoros, Mexico (Ramos, et al., 2008) • Loveland, Colo., had 3x higher WNV rate vs. nearby Fort Collins in 2003. Difference in repellent use (significantly great in Ft. Collins) possible factor (Zielinski, et al., 2008)
Regulation of Repellents • CDC and California public health agencies recommend consumers use EPA-registered active ingredients: • DEET, oil of lemon eucalyptus (OLE), picaridin, IR 3535 • EPA registers products after reviewing extensive efficacy, safety data • The EPA says registration “indicates the materials have been reviewed and approved for efficacy and human safety when applied according to the instructions on the label.” (CDC)
Types of Active Ingredients • EPA-registered products most effective (CDC) - “conventional repellents” – DEET & picaridin - “biopesticide repellents” – OLE & IR3535 • “Natural” products • Many are untested for efficacy • Very little toxicity data available • Less effective (Fradin & Day 2002) • Possible allergens (Day & Rutlege, 2008) • Many last at most 20 minutes • No more effective than cooking oil or other barrier
“Natural” Repellents • Limited efficacy • Efficacy testing not required • Many consumers make their own OLE concoctions • These are ineffective • Many essential oils are highly irritating to skin and must be used cautiously on children
DEET • DEET used for more than 50 years, most widely studied repellent active ingredient • “DEET has been shown to be an extremely safe and effective repellent and remains a very important option for consumers.” CDC’s Lyle R. Petersen, M.D., M.P.H. • Urban legends on safety have a life of their own and are generally without foundation (For specifics, please ask during Q&A)
The Science • Industry-sponsored studies • Leading companies conduct rigorous studies per EPA guidelines • Competitive claims from less effective, non-registered products lead to consumer confusion • Examples on the internet • Independent studies • Scientists continually study DEET, potential alternatives • Fradin, Day 2002 NEJM considered benchmark • Copies available upon request
Concentration = Protection Time • DEET • 5% provides approx. 90 minutes • 10% provides approx. 2 hours • 30% provides approx. 5 hours • Protection Time Variables • Weather conditions • Biting pressure • Race • Gender • Activities (swimming, perspiring heavily) • Body chemistry
Adverse Events • The most commonly reported AEs • Eye irritation • Formulations contain alcohol • VERY rarely, skin rash • Thought to be associated with other ingredients
Registry Details • More than 5 billion applications of DEET during 7-year Registry period • “Overall risk of clinically significant adverse events is very low” Thomas G. Osimitz, Ph. D., CDC conference, 2005 • No association with seizures • Copies of Registry Poster presentation at CDC meeting available upon request
Using Repellents • Read, carefully follow label directions • Apply to exposed skin, not under clothing • Apply evenly, rub product onto skin to ensure even coverage (mosquitoes can find an uncovered spot the size of a dime) • Wash off after returning indoors
Repellents on Children • AAP recommendations • Up to 30% concentration DEET-based repellent for all over 2 months old • Adults should apply to young children • Adult puts repellent on his/her hands, then applies on child’s skin • Don’t spray randomly in the air • OLE should not be used on children younger than 3 years old • After time outdoors, check for insect bites and ticks
Special Populations • Pregnant women/ Nursing mothers • CDC recommends pregnant and lactating women use repellents as needed • Elderly • At special risk for serious WNV illnesses • Children under 2 months old • Use mosquito netting • Children at camp • Use higher concentrations for extended coverage (30%) • Reapply only when bugs start biting again
Summary • Encourage patients to: • use EPA-registered repellents • read the instructions before use
More information: www.cdc.gov www.cdph.ca.gov www.sdcounty.ca.gov www.deetonline.org
Further questions to:Ms. Susan LittleExecutive DirectorDEET Education Program202-833-7315 / slittle@cspa.org1-800-No-Bites www.deetonline.org