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Impacts of ambient temperature on the burden of bacillary dysentery in urban and rural Hefei, China.

Authors :
CHENG, J.
XIE, M. Y.
ZHAO, K. F.
WU, J. J.
XU, Z. W.
SONG, J.
ZHAO, D. S.
LI, K. S.
WANG, X.
YANG, H. H.
WEN, L. Y.
SU, H.
TONG, S. L.
Source :
Epidemiology & Infection; Jun2017, Vol. 145 Issue 8, p1567-1576, 10p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Bacillary dysentery continues to be a major health issue in developing countries and ambient temperature is a possible environmental determinant. However, evidence about the risk of bacillary dysentery attributable to ambient temperature under climate change scenarios is scarce. We examined the attributable fraction (AF) of temperature-related bacillary dysentery in urban and rural Hefei, China during 2006–2012 and projected its shifting pattern under climate change scenarios using a distributed lag non-linear model. The risk of bacillary dysentery increased with the temperature rise above a threshold (18·4 °C), and the temperature effects appeared to be acute. The proportion of bacillary dysentery attributable to hot temperatures was 18·74% (95 empirical confidence interval (eCI): 8·36–27·44%). Apparent difference of AF was observed between urban and rural areas, with AF varying from 26·87% (95% eCI 16·21–36·68%) in urban area to −1·90% (95 eCI −25·03 to 16·05%) in rural area. Under the climate change scenarios alone (1–4 °C rise), the AF from extreme hot temperatures (>31·2 °C) would rise greatly accompanied by the relatively stable AF from moderate hot temperatures (18·4–31·2 °C). If climate change proceeds, urban area may be more likely to suffer from rapidly increasing burden of disease from extreme hot temperatures in the absence of effective mitigation and adaptation strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09502688
Volume :
145
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Epidemiology & Infection
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123303269
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817000280