Project Mosblock
Zebra printed mosquito repellent curtains
How does it work?
Project Mosblock has recently been launched to combat the ever-growing mosquito-borne disease by providing a special type of curtain to slum dwellers in the capital. Under a pilot study of the project, curtains made with zebra pattern cloth were distributed among the dwellers of the capital’s Korail Slum, one of the largest slums in Bangladesh. The project officials said that zebra stripes ward off blood-sucking insects including mosquitoes by dazzling them to the point where they are unable to land on the animals’ skin.
Why is it needed?
According to World Health Organisation, the number of dengue cases reported to WHO increased over 8-fold over the last two decades, from 505,430 cases in 2000, to over 2.4 million in 2010, and 5.2 million in 2019. Reported deaths between the years 2000 and 2015 increased from 960 to 4032, affecting mostly the younger age group. Bangladesh saw its worst encounter with the Aedes mosquito-borne disease in 2019, with over 100,000 afflicted by the virus and 148 had died of dengue. The death toll from dengue has surpassed 100 in 2021, the second-highest annual tally recorded in Bangladesh.
How does it improve life?
Direct-to-home service provider Akash Digital TV and advertising agency Grey has partnered for the project as part of their effort to ease the severity of the mosquito disease among marginal communities across the country. The free distribution and setting up of the curtains were conducted by volunteers of Akash Digital TV across the slum. They also carried out an awareness campaign. The project officials hoped that the project initiative would contain the mosquito-borne disease outbreak in the capital’s slums.