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Meteorological factors and tick density affect the dynamics of SFTS in jiangsu province, China

Authors :
Bin Deng
Jia Rui
Shu-yi Liang
Zhi-feng Li
Kangguo Li
Shengnan Lin
Li Luo
Jingwen Xu
Weikang Liu
Jiefeng Huang
Hongjie Wei
Tianlong Yang
Chan Liu
Zhuoyang Li
Peihua Li
Zeyu Zhao
Yao Wang
Meng Yang
Yuanzhao Zhu
Xingchun Liu
Nan Zhang
Xiao-qing Cheng
Xiao-chen Wang
Jian-li Hu
Tianmu Chen
Source :
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. 16:e0010432
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2022.

Abstract

Background This study aimed to explore whether the transmission routes of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) will be affected by tick density and meteorological factors, and to explore the factors that affect the transmission of SFTS. We used the transmission dynamics model to calculate the transmission rate coefficients of different transmission routes of SFTS, and used the generalized additive model to uncover how meteorological factors and tick density affect the spread of SFTS. Methods In this study, the time-varying infection rate coefficients of different transmission routes of SFTS in Jiangsu Province from 2017 to 2020 were calculated based on the previous multi-population multi-route dynamic model (MMDM) of SFTS. The changes in transmission routes were summarized by collecting questionnaires from 537 SFTS cases in 2018–2020 in Jiangsu Province. The incidence rate of SFTS and the infection rate coefficients of different transmission routes were dependent variables, and month, meteorological factors and tick density were independent variables to establish a generalized additive model (GAM). The optimal GAM was selected using the generalized cross-validation score (GCV), and the model was validated by the 2016 data of Zhejiang Province and 2020 data of Jiangsu Province. The validated GAMs were used to predict the incidence and infection rate coefficients of SFTS in Jiangsu province in 2021, and also to predict the effect of extreme weather on SFTS. Results The number and proportion of infections by different transmission routes for each year and found that tick-to-human and human-to-human infections decreased yearly, but infections through animal and environmental transmission were gradually increasing. MMDM fitted well with the three-year SFTS incidence data (PR2 = 96%). Reported incidence increased when sunshine duration was higher than 11 h per day and decreased when temperatures were too high (>28°C). Sunshine duration and temperature had the greatest effect on transmission from host animals to humans. The effect of extreme weather conditions on SFTS was short-term, but there was no effect on SFTS after high temperature and sunshine hours. Conclusions Different factors affect the infection rate coefficients of different transmission routes. Sunshine duration, relative humidity, temperature and tick density are important factors affecting the occurrence of SFTS. Hurricanes reduce the incidence of SFTS in the short term, but have little effect in the long term. The most effective intervention to reduce the incidence of SFTS is to reduce population exposure to high-risk environments.

Details

ISSN :
19352735
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50b5004031242cfad04d1255f9c0acf1