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Shifts in the Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Schistosomiasis: A Case Study in Anhui Province, China

Yi Hu, Rui Li, Yue Chen, Fenghua Gao, Qizhi Wang, Shiqing Zhang, Zhijie Zhang and Qingwu Jiang

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2015, vol. 9, issue 4, 1-13

Abstract: Background: The Chinese national surveillance system showed that the risk of Schistosoma japonicum infection fluctuated temporally. This dynamical change might indicate periodicity of the disease, and its understanding could significantly improve targeted interventions to reduce the burden of schistosomiasis. The goal of this study was to investigate how the schistosomiasis risk varied temporally and spatially in recent years. Methodology/Principal Findings: Parasitological data were obtained through repeated cross-sectional surveys that were carried out during 1997-2010 in Anhui Province, East China. A multivariate autoregressive model, combined with principal oscillation pattern (POP) analysis, was used to evaluate the spatio-temporal variation of schistosomiasis risk. Results showed that the temporal changes of schistosomiasis risk in the study area could be decomposed into two sustained damped oscillatory modes with estimated period of approximately 2.5 years. The POPs associated with these oscillatory components showed that the pattern near the Yangtze River varied markedly and that the disease risk appeared to evolve in a Southwest/Northeast orientation. The POP coefficients showed decreasing tendency until 2001, then increasing during 2002-2005 and decaying afterwards. Conclusion: The POP analysis characterized the variations of schistosomiasis risk over space and time and demonstrated that the disease mainly varied temporally along the Yangtze River. The schistosomiasis risk declined periodically with a temporal fluctuation. Whether it resulted from previous national control strategies on schistosomiasis needs further investigations. Author Summary: We investigated changes in dynamics of schistosomiasis transmission over space and time in Anhui Province of East China. Parasitological data were obtained through repeated cross-sectional surveys that were carried out during 1997–2010. A multivariate autoregressive model, combined with principal oscillation pattern (POP) analysis, was used to evaluate the spatio-temporal variation of schistosomiasis risk. The schistosomiasis risk changed temporally as a damped oscillatory mode with a fluctuation, indicating that the disease risk declined periodically but with a temporal ascent during the study period. This change might result from national control strategies on schistosomiasis. The POP analysis also demonstrated a shifting spatial pattern of schistosomiasis along the Yangtze River. The POP method is commonly used in geosciences but not in epidemiology. Our analysis based on the approach provided new insights into the research of schistosomiasis transmission. The utility of such methods for addressing epidemiological problems will grow as more large-scale datasets become readily available.

Date: 2015
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0003715

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003715

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