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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Climatic components of seasonal variation in cholera incidence

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Hashizume M, Wagatsuma Y, Faruque ASG, Taiichi Hayashi H, Armstrong B
2009
Epidemiology
20(6)
S153
International Society of Environmental Epidemiologists (ISEE) 21st Annual Conference held 25-29 August 2009 (Dublin, Ireland)

Background: The mechanisms underlying seasonality of cholera remain poorly understood, despite long-standing recognition of clear seasonality. We aimed to quantify the contribution of climatic factors to seasonal variation in cholera incidence. Methods: We investigated the association between weekly number of cholera patients in Bangladesh and seasonal and weather factors, using Poisson regression models. The contribution of each weather factor (temperature, high and low rainfall) to seasonal variation was estimated as the mean over seven years, for each week of the year of each weather term. Fractions of the number of cholera patients attributed to each weather factor, assuming all values were constant at their minimum risk levels throughout the year, were estimated for spring and monsoon seasons separately. Results: Temperature predicts lower incidence of cholera in the first 10 weeks of the year; low rainfall predicts a peak in spring; and high rainfall predicts a peak during the monsoon. The risk predicted from all the weather factors combined showed a broadly bi-modal pattern, as observed in the raw data. Conclusions: Seasonal variation in the number of cholera patients in Bangladesh could be partly explained by temperature and rainfall. The first and second peaks were substantially attributable to low and high rainfall, respectively, while low temperature explained the winter trough.

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Resource Description

    Precipitation, Temperature
    General Geographic Feature
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Asia
    Infectious Disease
    • Infectious Disease: Waterborne Disease
      • Waterborne Disease: Cholera (waterborne)
      Waterborne Disease
    Research Article
    Adaptation
    • Adaptation: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Vulnerability Assessment
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