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Dengue transmission dynamics in an urban setting in western India

Karuppusamy Balasubramani, Syed Shah Areeb Hussain, Sushant Sawant, Abhishek Govekar, Pooja Telugu Prakash, Aparna Naik, Debattam Mazumdar, Jagannath Nayak, Kuldeep Singh, Lokesh Kori, Kalpana Mahatme, Arun Kumar Prasad, Praveen Balabaskaran Nina and Ajeet Kumar Mohanty

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2026, vol. 20, issue 3, 1-21

Abstract: Background: The state of Goa, a popular tourist destination located on India’s western coast, has seen a steep increase in dengue cases in the last decade. Systematic characterization of case trends, serotypes, affected demographics, spatiotemporal clusters and hotspots, and environmental determinants was undertaken to guide evidence-based dengue prevention and control policies in Goa and across western India. Method: A health center level spatiotemporal analysis of dengue from 2011–2024 was performed using passive surveillance data routinely collected from all 34 health facilities through the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme, Directorate of Health Services, Goa. The dengue trends were analyzed using the Seasonal Mann-Kendall (SMK) test. The space-time trends, dengue case clusters (high and low transmission zones across Goa), and forest-based forecasting were performed using the space-time pattern mining framework in ArcGIS Pro 3.x. The negative binomial generalized linear model with log link was used to quantify location effects. The correlation between climate change and rising dengue incidences was determined using a distributed lag non-linear model. Results: The dominant dengue virus serotype in Goa was DENV-2, accounting for 58.6% of infections, followed by DENV-1 (21.51%), DENV-3 (17.87%), and DENV-4 (2.03%). The clusters of dengue cases were predominantly observed in North Goa—the SMK test showed a significant positive trend across 16 of the 17 health facilities in the district. The space-time analysis showed a significant monotonic increase (standardized Mann-Kendall Z-statistics ≈ 3.94; p

Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0013636

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0013636

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Handle: RePEc:plo:pntd00:0013636