





Free delivery in Europe (EU Zone) from €75*
10% discount on your first order!
Delivery costs from 4.50€*
Free delivery in Europe (EU Zone) from €75*
10% discount on your first order!
Delivery costs from 4.50€*
( €2.50 U )
Simply slip the bracelet onto your wrist, ankle or attach it to your backpack, stroller, tent peg… and enjoy your mosquito-free day. Each bracelet lasts up to 200 hours after the seal breaks.
Packaged in France Bag of 1 bracelet
Our Privacy Policy explains our principles when it comes to the collection, processing, and storage of your information. This policy specifically explains how we employ cookies, as well as the options you have to control them.
Cookies are small pieces of data, stored in text files that are stored on your computer or other device when websites are loaded in a browser. They are widely used to "remember" you and your preferences, either for a single visit or for multiple repeat visits
We use cookies for a number of different purposes. Some cookies are necessary for technical reasons; some enable a personalized experience for both visitors and registered users; and some allow the display of advertising from selected third party networks.
Visitors may wish to restrict the use of cookies or completely prevent them from being set. If you disable cookies, please be aware that some of the features of our service may not function correctly
We only collect information about you if we have a reason to do so-for example, to provide our services, to communicate with you, or to make our services better.
We are committed to maintaining the trust and confidence of our website visitors. We do not collect, sell, rent or trade email lists or any data with other companies and businesses. Have a look at our Privacy Policy page to read detail information on when and why we collect your personal information, how we use it, the limited conditions under which we may disclose it to others and how we keep it secure.
We may change Cookies and Privacy policy from time to time. This policy is effective from 24th May 2018.
Simply slip the bracelet onto your wrist, ankle or attach it to your backpack, stroller, tent peg… and enjoy your day without mosquitoes.
Each bracelet lasts up to 200 hours after the seal breaks.
USE :
Precautionary advice External use only,
do not swallow or put in mouth.
In case of accidental contact with the mouth or eyes, rinse thoroughly with water, contact your doctor quickly.
Not intended for children under 3 years old,
not suitable for pregnant and/or breastfeeding women.
In the rare event of irritation, discontinue use and wash with mild soap and water. Use with adult supervision
http://vigilance-moustiques.com
There are no longer any departments in simple health monitoring (green color). All departments that are neither in orange nor red alert are switched to yellow alert, which means that they are in entomological monitoring, according to modified monitoring procedures. Concretely, this means that a department in entomological monitoring is entrusted to a public body responsible for at least: processing all reports of cases of tiger mosquito presence received via signalement-moustiques.fr, carrying out entomological surveys in the event of detection, carrying out any Anti-Vectorial Control operations if necessary. Beyond this minimum system, some organizations responsible for this monitoring add traps (laying nests) to the system placed in strategic locations and observe natural nests to complete the level of information.
THE TIGER MOSQUITO:
At the beginning of April, IFOP* carried out a study for Vigilance-Moustiques to determine the knowledge of the French about the tiger mosquito in the metropolitan departments concerned by the red alert, that is to say those in which it is established and active.
It turns out that: More than 90% are mistaken about the diseases that the tiger mosquito can transmit.
While Chikungunya is reported at 82%, dengue fever at 65% and Zika at only 54%, nearly one in two French people wrongly believe that a tiger mosquito bite can be a vector for transmitting malaria. 59% do not have the reflex to report the presence of the tiger mosquito to the competent authorities.
This figure varies depending on whether the mosquito has been established in the region for a longer or shorter time:
71% in Ile de France versus 16% in PACA. Thus, almost half of the population concerned is not sufficiently informed about the tiger mosquito and the role it has to play in vigilance.
*Find the full study here