Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China

AbstractBackground: Typhoid and paratyphoid fever are endemic in Hongta District and their prevalence, at 113 per 100,000individuals, remains the highest in China. However, the exact sources of the disease and its main epidemiologicalcharacteristics have not yet been clearly identified.Methods and F...

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Main Authors: Wang, J., Wang, Y., Zhang, J., Christakos, G., Sun, J., Liu, Xin, Lu, L., Fu, X., Shi, Y., Li, X.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Public Library of Science 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8317
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author Wang, J.
Wang, Y.
Zhang, J.
Christakos, G.
Sun, J.
Liu, Xin
Lu, L.
Fu, X.
Shi, Y.
Li, X.
author_facet Wang, J.
Wang, Y.
Zhang, J.
Christakos, G.
Sun, J.
Liu, Xin
Lu, L.
Fu, X.
Shi, Y.
Li, X.
author_sort Wang, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description AbstractBackground: Typhoid and paratyphoid fever are endemic in Hongta District and their prevalence, at 113 per 100,000individuals, remains the highest in China. However, the exact sources of the disease and its main epidemiologicalcharacteristics have not yet been clearly identified.Methods and Findings: Numbers of typhoid and paratyphoid cases per day during the period 2006 to 2010 were obtainedfrom the Chinese Center of Disease Control (CDC). A number of suspected disease determinants (or their proxies), wereconsidered for use in spatiotemporal analysis: these included locations of discharge canals and food markets, as well associo-economic and environmental factors. Results showed that disease prevalence was spatially clustered with clustersdecreasing with increasing distance from markets and discharge canals. More than half of the spatial variance could beexplained by a combination of economic conditions and availability of health facilities. Temporal prevalence fluctuationswere positively associated with the monthly precipitation series. Polluted hospital and residential wastewater was beingdischarged into rainwater canals. Salmonella bacteria were found in canal water, on farmland and on vegetables sold inmarkets.Conclusion: Disease transmission in Hongta district is driven principally by two spatiotemporally coupled cycles: oneinvolving seasonal variations and the other the distribution of polluted farmland (where vegetables are grown and sold inmarkets). Disease transmission was exacerbated by the fact that rainwater canals were being used for disposal of pollutedwaste from hospitals and residential areas. Social factors and their interactions also played a significant role in diseasetransmission
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:20:17Z
publishDate 2013
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-83172018-12-14T00:47:14Z Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China Wang, J. Wang, Y. Zhang, J. Christakos, G. Sun, J. Liu, Xin Lu, L. Fu, X. Shi, Y. Li, X. Yunnan Province Typhoid Paratyphoid Fever China Hongta District AbstractBackground: Typhoid and paratyphoid fever are endemic in Hongta District and their prevalence, at 113 per 100,000individuals, remains the highest in China. However, the exact sources of the disease and its main epidemiologicalcharacteristics have not yet been clearly identified.Methods and Findings: Numbers of typhoid and paratyphoid cases per day during the period 2006 to 2010 were obtainedfrom the Chinese Center of Disease Control (CDC). A number of suspected disease determinants (or their proxies), wereconsidered for use in spatiotemporal analysis: these included locations of discharge canals and food markets, as well associo-economic and environmental factors. Results showed that disease prevalence was spatially clustered with clustersdecreasing with increasing distance from markets and discharge canals. More than half of the spatial variance could beexplained by a combination of economic conditions and availability of health facilities. Temporal prevalence fluctuationswere positively associated with the monthly precipitation series. Polluted hospital and residential wastewater was beingdischarged into rainwater canals. Salmonella bacteria were found in canal water, on farmland and on vegetables sold inmarkets.Conclusion: Disease transmission in Hongta district is driven principally by two spatiotemporally coupled cycles: oneinvolving seasonal variations and the other the distribution of polluted farmland (where vegetables are grown and sold inmarkets). Disease transmission was exacerbated by the fact that rainwater canals were being used for disposal of pollutedwaste from hospitals and residential areas. Social factors and their interactions also played a significant role in diseasetransmission 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8317 Public Library of Science restricted
spellingShingle Yunnan Province
Typhoid
Paratyphoid Fever
China
Hongta District
Wang, J.
Wang, Y.
Zhang, J.
Christakos, G.
Sun, J.
Liu, Xin
Lu, L.
Fu, X.
Shi, Y.
Li, X.
Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title_full Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title_short Spatiotemporal Transmission and Determinants of Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever in Hongta District, Yunnan Province, China
title_sort spatiotemporal transmission and determinants of typhoid and paratyphoid fever in hongta district, yunnan province, china
topic Yunnan Province
Typhoid
Paratyphoid Fever
China
Hongta District
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8317