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Assessing dengue knowledge, attitudes and preventive practices using participatory surveillance cohorts

Calmon, L.; De Gaetano, A.; Mazzoli, M.; Gozzi, N.; Frigione, G.; Debin, M.; Turbelin, C.; Marmorat, R.; Perra, N.; Barrat, A.; Colizza, V.; Paolotti, D.

2025-11-06 public and global health
10.1101/2025.11.05.25339567 medRxiv
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BackgroundThe dengue virus, transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, causes an estimated 100-390 million infections annually. With no treatment available, mitigation and prevention involves reducing mosquito breeding and limiting feeding opportunities. Due to changing climate conditions, Aedes mosquitoes are increasingly established in Europe causing more local cases. In this context, understanding population knowledge, attitudes, and practices in areas where dengue is an emerging threat is necessary for effective prevention. MethodsWe designed a survey collecting knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about dengue in the general population, leveraging the French and Italian 2024 cohorts of the participatory surveillance network InfluenzaNet. Responses from 2,500 participants in mainland France and 404 in Italy were pooled for the analysis. Via bias-adjusted (i.e., age, sex and education) logistic and ordinal regression, we examined determinants of awareness of dengue and knowledge of its characteristics, adoption of preventive measures, and vaccination willingness. ResultsOver 91% of included participants were aware of dengue circulating in Europe or the rest of the world, and 16% had sought information. Seeking information and concerns about dengue were significant determinants of knowledge, preventive measures adoption, and vaccination willingness. Better knowledge of dengue characteristics, vaccination status, residence in areas with detected autochthonous cases, and presence of comorbidities were associated with greater adoption of preventive measures. Living in rural areas was associated with lower knowledge and vaccination willingness but higher adoption of preventive measures. Finally, 0.4% of participants had received a dengue vaccine (not recommended to the general population), and 54.6% would accept a vaccine if offered. Low-risk perception was the most common reason for refusal. ConclusionsOur study highlights the interplay between knowledge, attitudes, behaviours, socio-demographic, individual and contextual characteristics of the participants related to dengue in a non-endemic context. Information search and concern levels correlated with knowledge, adoption of measures, and willingness to vaccinate, while, knowledge was associated with the adoption of preventive measures, alongside perceived efficacy, local epidemiological context, occupation of participants, sex, vaccination and symptom history. Targeted communication strategies accounting for these factors are essential to enhance preparedness and outbreak prevention in regions where dengue represents an emerging threat.

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