1. A geospatial platform to support visualization, analysis, and prediction of tuberculosis notification in space and time.
- Author
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Dao TP, Hoang XHT, Nguyen DN, Huynh NQ, Pham TT, Nguyen DT, Nguyen HB, Do NH, Nguyen HV, Dao CH, Nguyen NV, and Bui HM
- Subjects
- Cities, Humans, Incidence, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology, Tuberculosis diagnosis, Tuberculosis epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Tuberculosis has caused significant public health and economic burdens in Vietnam over the years. The Vietnam National Tuberculosis Program is facing considerable challenges in its goal to eliminate tuberculosis by 2030, with the COVID-19 pandemic having negatively impacted routine tuberculosis services at all administrative levels. While the turnaround time of tuberculosis infection may delay disease detection, high transportation frequency could potentially mislead epidemiological studies. This study was conducted to develop an online geospatial platform to support healthcare workers in performing data visualization and promoting the active case surveillance in community as well as predicting the TB incidence in space and time., Method: This geospatial platform was developed using tuberculosis notification data managed by The Vietnam National Tuberculosis Program. The platform allows case distribution to be visualized by administrative level and time. Users can retrieve epidemiological measurements from the platform, which are calculated and visualized both temporally and spatially. The prediction model was developed to predict the TB incidence in space and time., Results: An online geospatial platform was developed, which presented the prediction model providing estimates of case detection. There were 400,370 TB cases with bacterial evidence to be included in the study. We estimated that the prevalence of TB in Vietnam was at 414.67 cases per 100.000 population. Ha Noi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City were predicted as three likely epidemiological hotspots in the near future., Conclusion: Our findings indicate that increased efforts should be undertaken to control tuberculosis transmission in these hotspots., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Dao, Hoang, Nguyen, Huynh, Pham, Nguyen, Nguyen, Do, Nguyen, Dao, Nguyen and Bui.)
- Published
- 2022
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