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AAMA hosts CDC to discuss screens to prevent spread of Zika Virus

May 12, 2016  By AAMA


May 12, 2016 – During an industry forum on May 4, the American Architectural Manufacturers Association (AAMA) hosted representatives from the Center of Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), who are seeking assistance from fenestration experts in combating the Zika Virus in Puerto Rico. Industry representatives suggested products and generated ideas to screen windows and doors in Puerto Rican homes to reduce exposure to mosquitoes – carriers of the untreatable Zika Virus. This urgent public safety issue was discussed in a forum hosted by AAMA, to help generate possible solutions.

The CDC has specifically worked in the territory testing ways to mosquito proof homes of pregnant women (who are at especially high risk of birth defects if infected). Unfortunately, a pilot program that provided window screening “Do-it-Yourself” kits for installation on existing homes was met with little success. The top three challenges faced included:

  • Unique and non-standard windows across housing units in Puerto Rico – one size fits all solutions do not work.
  • Jalousie style windows are common and there is often insufficient room in existing window boxes to install screens and still allow windows to open.
  • Building materials such as concrete block and stucco make it difficult to attach screens to window frames and buildings. Velcro, staples and duct tape were tested, but were not successful.

Possible workarounds and solutions for short-term screening on these homes, many of which are rental units, were proposed. The typical windows in Puerto Rico are jalousies with interior crank handles and shallow sill depth, which makes it difficult to apply screens. Therefore, future installation kits sent to Puerto Rico, and later to other impacted areas, must take into account the following:

  • Ease of installation
  • Being visually acceptable
  • Withstanding high humidity and the rainy season
  • Allowing for unrestricted natural light and airflow in the house

The CDC welcomes any ideas from AAMA members and others in the industry, particularly in regards to products that may currently exist, or may quickly be developed, to help provide screening on windows and doors of existing homes in Puerto Rico (and potentially other territories with mosquito-borne Zika transmission, such as U.S. Virgin Islands and American Samoa.)

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For more information
www.aamanet.org


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