A Pan European technical guideline on vector surveillance and control including frameworks for decision making and action is repeatedly called for by member states, in hopes for a “recipe for success”. While various guidelines are developed, an all-purpose “recipe for success” does not exist, not now and not in the future. Why not, one may ask? It is because controlling vectors is not just a matter of following a set of predetermined instructions. It is challenging, principally because it concerns organisms with naturally large population fluctuations that give rise to high spatial and temporal variations and enormous resilience to control interventions. These basic characteristics of vectors are not easy to overcome, even with innovative methods or integrated vector management approaches. Recognition that controlling vectors is not just a matter of following a generic protocol is the first step. As a matter of fact, there is nothing simple about vector control. Real progress is only possible when we, entomologists and vector control professionals, stop trading in fantasy and pipe dreams and start facing the challenges of controlling vector-borne diseases through sustainable integrated vector management in the real world.
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Dr. Marieta Braks (1969) is a medical entomologist at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (Netherlands) and is a lecturer at the Leiden Centre for Environmental Sciences. She is committed to education, surveillance, research and policy advice to promote the prevention and control of vectors and the diseases they spread in the Netherlands, Europe and the Dutch Caribbean.