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Bayesian dynamic modeling of time series of dengue disease case counts

Daniel Adyro Martínez-Bello, Antonio López-Quílez and Alexander Torres-Prieto

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2017, vol. 11, issue 7, 1-19

Abstract: The aim of this study is to model the association between weekly time series of dengue case counts and meteorological variables, in a high-incidence city of Colombia, applying Bayesian hierarchical dynamic generalized linear models over the period January 2008 to August 2015. Additionally, we evaluate the model’s short-term performance for predicting dengue cases. The methodology shows dynamic Poisson log link models including constant or time-varying coefficients for the meteorological variables. Calendar effects were modeled using constant or first- or second-order random walk time-varying coefficients. The meteorological variables were modeled using constant coefficients and first-order random walk time-varying coefficients. We applied Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulations for parameter estimation, and deviance information criterion statistic (DIC) for model selection. We assessed the short-term predictive performance of the selected final model, at several time points within the study period using the mean absolute percentage error. The results showed the best model including first-order random walk time-varying coefficients for calendar trend and first-order random walk time-varying coefficients for the meteorological variables. Besides the computational challenges, interpreting the results implies a complete analysis of the time series of dengue with respect to the parameter estimates of the meteorological effects. We found small values of the mean absolute percentage errors at one or two weeks out-of-sample predictions for most prediction points, associated with low volatility periods in the dengue counts. We discuss the advantages and limitations of the dynamic Poisson models for studying the association between time series of dengue disease and meteorological variables. The key conclusion of the study is that dynamic Poisson models account for the dynamic nature of the variables involved in the modeling of time series of dengue disease, producing useful models for decision-making in public health.Author summary: Time series analysis of dengue disease case counts are currently employed to establish associations between dengue disease and environmental, socioeconomic and climatic variables and to predict the evolution of dengue epidemics. Nowadays there is acceptance that climatic factors like environmental temperature, rainfall and relative humidity modify the behavior of the dengue vectors, affecting the transmission of the disease. Thus, in the absence of vector data, climatic factors are commonly used to input transmission models of dengue disease on several temporal and spatial scales. We applied hierarchical Bayesian dynamic generalized models to dengue diseases case counts in a medium-sized city in Colombia, with constant and time-varying coefficients for calendar trend, and constant and time-varying coefficients for meteorological variables (temperature, rainfall, solar radiation and relative humidity). We selected a final model useful for exploring of the time-varying association between climatic variables and dengue, and the short-term out-of-sample predictions of dengue counts within the study period. We illustrate the modeling process so a data analyst on a multidisciplinary research team could integrate a time series model accounting for the time-varying nature of the data.

Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0005696

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005696

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Handle: RePEc:plo:pntd00:0005696