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Associations between dengue and combinations of weather factors in a city in the Brazilian Amazon
Rosa-Freitas, Maria Goreti; Schreiber, Kathleen V; Tsouris, Pantelis; Weimann, Ellem Tatiani de Souza; Luitgards-Moura, José Francisco.
  • Rosa-Freitas, Maria Goreti; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Departamento de Entomologia. Laboratório de Transmissores de Hematozoários. Rio de Janeiro. BR
  • Schreiber, Kathleen V; Millersville University of Pennsylvania. Department of Geography. Millersville. US
  • Tsouris, Pantelis; Universidade Federal de Roraima. Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde, Núcleo Avançado de Vetores. Boa Vista. BR
  • Weimann, Ellem Tatiani de Souza; Universidade Federal de Roraima. Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde. Núcleo Avançado de Vetores. Boa Vista. BR
  • Luitgards-Moura, José Francisco; Universidade Federal de Roraima. Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde. Núcleo Avançado de Vetores. Boa Vista. BR
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 20(4): 256-267, oct. 2006. mapas, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-441057
ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES:

Dengue has become the most important endemic disease in Brazil. The Amazonian state of Roraima has one of the highest incidence rates of dengue in the country. The objective of this study was to determine whether significant temporal relationships exist between the number of reported dengue cases and short-term climate measures for the city of Boa Vista, the capital of Roraima. If such relationships exist, that suggests that it may be possible to predict dengue case numbers based on antecedent climate, thus helping develop a climate-based dengue early-warning system for Boa Vista.

METHODS:

Seasonal Pearson product-moment correlations were developed between 3-week running averages of daily numbers of reported dengue cases for September 1998-December 2001 and certain meteorological variables (thermal, hydroclimatic, wind, atmospheric pressure, and humidity) up to 25 weeks before. Two-sample t tests were also applied to test for statistically significant differences between samples of daily dengue cases with above-average values and samples with below-average values for three-variable meteorological combinations. These multivariate combinations consisted of the three climate measures that together explained the greatest portion of the variance in the number of dengue cases for the particular season.

RESULTS:

The strength of the individual averaged correlations varied from weak to moderate. The correlations differed according to the period of the year, the particular climatic variable, and the lag period between the climate indicator and the number of dengue cases. The seasonal correlations in our study showed far stronger relationships than had daily, full-year measures reported in previous studies. Two-sample t tests of multivariate meteorological combinations of atmospheric pressure, wind, and humidity values showed statistically significant differences in the number of reported dengue cases.

CONCLUSIONS:

Relationships between...
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Index: LILACS (Americas) Main subject: Weather / Urban Health / Dengue Type of study: Prognostic study / Risk factors Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: South America / Brazil Language: English Journal: Rev. panam. salud pública Journal subject: Public Health Year: 2006 Type: Article / Project document Affiliation country: Brazil / United States Institution/Affiliation country: Instituto Oswaldo Cruz/BR / Millersville University of Pennsylvania/US / Universidade Federal de Roraima/BR

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Full text: Available Index: LILACS (Americas) Main subject: Weather / Urban Health / Dengue Type of study: Prognostic study / Risk factors Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: South America / Brazil Language: English Journal: Rev. panam. salud pública Journal subject: Public Health Year: 2006 Type: Article / Project document Affiliation country: Brazil / United States Institution/Affiliation country: Instituto Oswaldo Cruz/BR / Millersville University of Pennsylvania/US / Universidade Federal de Roraima/BR