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1.
Cien Saude Colet ; 25(8): 2961-2971, 2020 Aug 05.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32785533

ABSTRACT

The scope of this research was to identify and characterize spatial units of epidemiological relevance in the state of Rio de Janeiro, through the highest concentrations of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) from 1980 to 2012, considering the geographical aspects. SUCAM, FUNASA and SINAN databases were consulted. A method of adjustment of spatially referenced data for demarcation of the regions with the highest concentrations of cases called circuits and poles was applied. These were superimposed on the socioenvironmental indicator maps. Of the total cases registered in the period, 87% occurred in the municipalities located in the resulting circuits and poles. The variations in the occurrence of cases in the different circuits and poles were not related to the socioenvironmental indicators. The identification of the circuits and poles can subsidize the state CL program of the prioritization of strategies of prevention and control actions and the optimization of the resources of the program. These regions, which are more stable than the localities, allow surveillance and control operations in locations with many cases and in other locations in the identified risk area, because they have the same characteristics as those already affected.


O objetivo foi identificar e caracterizar unidades espaciais de relevância epidemiológica no estado do Rio de Janeiro, por meio das maiores concentrações de casos de leishmaniose tegumentar (LT) no período de 1980 a 2012, considerando os conceitos da geografia. Utilizou-se bancos de dados da SUCAM, FUNASA e SINAN. Foi aplicado um método de ajustamento de dados espacialmente referenciados para delimitação das regiões com as maiores concentrações de densidades de casos chamadas circuitos e polos. Estes foram sobrepostos aos mapas de indicadores socioambientais. Do total de casos registrados no período, 87% ocorreram nos municípios localizados nos circuitos e polos resultantes. As variações na ocorrência de casos nos diferentes circuitos e polos não tiveram relação com os indicadores socioambientais. A identificação dos circuitos e polos pode subsidiar o programa estadual da LT para a priorização de estratégias de ações de prevenção e controle e a otimização dos recursos do programa. Essas regiões, mais estáveis que as localidades, permitem operações de vigilância e controle nas localidades com muitos casos e nas demais da área de risco identificada, por terem as mesmas características daquelas já afetadas.


Subject(s)
Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous , Brazil/epidemiology , Humans , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/epidemiology
2.
Ciênc. Saúde Colet. (Impr.) ; 25(8): 2961-2971, Ago. 2020. graf
Article in Portuguese | LILACS, Coleciona SUS, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: biblio-1133097

ABSTRACT

Resumo O objetivo foi identificar e caracterizar unidades espaciais de relevância epidemiológica no estado do Rio de Janeiro, por meio das maiores concentrações de casos de leishmaniose tegumentar (LT) no período de 1980 a 2012, considerando os conceitos da geografia. Utilizou-se bancos de dados da SUCAM, FUNASA e SINAN. Foi aplicado um método de ajustamento de dados espacialmente referenciados para delimitação das regiões com as maiores concentrações de densidades de casos chamadas circuitos e polos. Estes foram sobrepostos aos mapas de indicadores socioambientais. Do total de casos registrados no período, 87% ocorreram nos municípios localizados nos circuitos e polos resultantes. As variações na ocorrência de casos nos diferentes circuitos e polos não tiveram relação com os indicadores socioambientais. A identificação dos circuitos e polos pode subsidiar o programa estadual da LT para a priorização de estratégias de ações de prevenção e controle e a otimização dos recursos do programa. Essas regiões, mais estáveis que as localidades, permitem operações de vigilância e controle nas localidades com muitos casos e nas demais da área de risco identificada, por terem as mesmas características daquelas já afetadas.


Abstract The scope of this research was to identify and characterize spatial units of epidemiological relevance in the state of Rio de Janeiro, through the highest concentrations of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) from 1980 to 2012, considering the geographical aspects. SUCAM, FUNASA and SINAN databases were consulted. A method of adjustment of spatially referenced data for demarcation of the regions with the highest concentrations of cases called circuits and poles was applied. These were superimposed on the socioenvironmental indicator maps. Of the total cases registered in the period, 87% occurred in the municipalities located in the resulting circuits and poles. The variations in the occurrence of cases in the different circuits and poles were not related to the socioenvironmental indicators. The identification of the circuits and poles can subsidize the state CL program of the prioritization of strategies of prevention and control actions and the optimization of the resources of the program. These regions, which are more stable than the localities, allow surveillance and control operations in locations with many cases and in other locations in the identified risk area, because they have the same characteristics as those already affected.


Subject(s)
Humans , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/epidemiology , Brazil/epidemiology
3.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 13(12): e0007906, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31815937

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although malaria cases have substantially decreased in Southeast Brazil, a significant increase in the number of Plasmodium vivax-like autochthonous human cases has been reported in remote areas of the Atlantic Forest in the past few decades in Rio de Janeiro (RJ) state, including an outbreak during 2015-2016. The singular clinical and epidemiological aspects in several human cases, and collectively with molecular and genetic data, revealed that they were due to the non-human primate (NHP) parasite Plasmodium simium; however, the understanding of the autochthonous malarial epidemiology in Southeast Brazil can only be acquired by assessing the circulation of NHP Plasmodium in the foci and determining its hosts. METHODOLOGY: A large sampling effort was carried out in the Atlantic forest of RJ and its bordering states (Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Espírito Santo) for collecting and examining free-living NHPs. Blood and/or viscera were analyzed for Plasmodium infections via molecular and microscopic techniques. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In total, 146 NHPs of six species, from 30 counties in four states, were tested, of which majority were collected from RJ. Howler monkeys (Alouatta clamitans) were the only species found infected. In RJ, 26% of these monkeys tested positive, of which 17% were found to be infected with P. simium. Importantly, specific single nucleotide polymorphisms-the only available genetic markers that differentiate P. simium from P. vivax-were detected in all P. simium infected A. clamitans despite their geographical origin of malarial foci. Interestingly, 71% of P. simium infected NHPs were from the coastal slope of a mountain chain (Serra do Mar), where majority of the human cases were found. Plasmodium brasilianum/malariae was initially detected in 14% and 25% free-living howler monkeys in RJ and in the Espírito Santo (ES) state, respectively. Moreover, the malarial pigment was detected in the spleen fragments of 50% of a subsample comprising dead howler monkeys in both RJ and ES. All NHPs were negative for Plasmodium falciparum. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data indicate that howler monkeys act as the main reservoir for the Atlantic forest human malarial parasites in RJ and other sites in Southeast Brazil and reinforce its zoonotic characteristics.


Subject(s)
Alouatta/parasitology , Disease Reservoirs/parasitology , Malaria/veterinary , Monkey Diseases/epidemiology , Plasmodium/classification , Plasmodium/isolation & purification , Zoonoses/epidemiology , Animals , Blood/parasitology , Brazil , Forests , Humans , Malaria/epidemiology , Malaria/parasitology , Monkey Diseases/parasitology , Zoonoses/parasitology
4.
Am J Primatol ; 81(6): e23000, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31192493

ABSTRACT

Howler monkey capture is an arduous and expensive task requiring trained and specialized professionals. We compared strategies and methods to most efficiently capture Alouatta guariba clamitans in remnants of the Atlantic Forest in Rio de Janeiro and its bordering states of Minas Gerais and São Paulo. We tested whether or not the success of expeditions in the forest with anesthetic darts, nets, and baited traps differed with and without the support of an information network, a contact chain built with key institutions and inhabitants to continuously monitor howler monkey presence. The influence of forest conditions (vegetation type and fragment size) upon darting success was also evaluated. We captured 24 free-living A. guariba clamitans. No howler monkey was caught with traps, probably due to the predominantly folivore feeding to high local plant diversity providing a great variety of food options. Captures based on an information network were significantly more efficient in terms of numbers of caught monkeys than without it. Captures with darts were considerably more efficient when performed in semideciduous forests and small forest fragments as opposed to ombrophilous forests or large woods. Although we walked great distances within the forest searching for howler monkeys, all but one animal were captured at the forest fringes. Hindrances to search and the darting method in the Atlantic Forest, for example, the steep terrain, high tree canopies, hunt pressure, and low A. guariba clamitans population density, were mitigated with the use of the information network in this monkey capture. Moreover, the information network enhanced the surveillance of zoonotic diseases, which howler monkeys and other nonhuman primates are reservoirs in Brazil, such as malaria and yellow fever.


Subject(s)
Alouatta/physiology , Immobilization/veterinary , Alouatta/parasitology , Alouatta/virology , Anesthetics/administration & dosage , Animals , Brazil/epidemiology , Forests , Immobilization/methods , Malaria/epidemiology , Monkey Diseases/epidemiology , Yellow Fever/epidemiology
5.
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ; 114: e190076, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31038550

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In Brazil, the Yellow Fever virus (YFV) is endemic in the Amazon, from where it eventually expands into epidemic waves. Coastal south-eastern (SE) Brazil, which has been a YFV-free region for eight decades, has reported a severe sylvatic outbreak since 2016. The virus spread from the north toward the south of the Rio de Janeiro (RJ) state, causing 307 human cases with 105 deaths during the 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 transmission seasons. It is unclear, however, whether the YFV would persist in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during subsequent transmission seasons. OBJECTIVES: To conduct a real-time surveillance and assess the potential persistence of YFV in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during the 2018-2019 transmission season. METHODS: We combined epizootic surveillance with fast diagnostic and molecular, phylogenetic, and evolutionary analyses. FINDINGS: Using this integrative strategy, we detected the first evidence of YFV re-emergence in the third transmission season (2018-2019) in a dying howler monkey from the central region of the RJ state. The YFV detected in 2019 has the molecular signature associated with the current SE YFV outbreak and exhibited a close phylogenetic relationship with the YFV lineage that circulated in the same Atlantic Forest fragment during the past seasons. This lineage circulated along the coastal side of the Serra do Mar mountain chain, and its evolution seems to be mainly driven by genetic drift. The potential bridge vector Aedes albopictus was found probing on the recently dead howler monkey in the forest edge, very close to urban areas. MAIN CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, our data revealed that YFV transmission persisted at the same Atlantic Forest area for at least three consecutive transmission seasons without the need of new introductions. Our real-time surveillance strategy permitted health authorities to take preventive actions within 48 h after the detection of the sick non-human primate. The local virus persistence and the proximity of the epizootic forest to urban areas reinforces the concern with regards to the risk of re-urbanisation and seasonal re-emergence of YFV, stressing the need for continuous effective surveillance and high vaccination coverage in the SE region, particularly in RJ, an important tourist location.


Subject(s)
Aedes/virology , Yellow Fever/epidemiology , Yellow Fever/virology , Yellow fever virus/genetics , Alouatta , Animals , Brazil/epidemiology , Disease Outbreaks , Humans , Phylogeography , Seasons , Urban Population , Yellow Fever/transmission
6.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 114: e190076, 2019. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1002689

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND In Brazil, the Yellow Fever virus (YFV) is endemic in the Amazon, from where it eventually expands into epidemic waves. Coastal south-eastern (SE) Brazil, which has been a YFV-free region for eight decades, has reported a severe sylvatic outbreak since 2016. The virus spread from the north toward the south of the Rio de Janeiro (RJ) state, causing 307 human cases with 105 deaths during the 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 transmission seasons. It is unclear, however, whether the YFV would persist in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during subsequent transmission seasons. OBJECTIVES To conduct a real-time surveillance and assess the potential persistence of YFV in the coastal Atlantic Forest of RJ during the 2018-2019 transmission season. METHODS We combined epizootic surveillance with fast diagnostic and molecular, phylogenetic, and evolutionary analyses. FINDINGS Using this integrative strategy, we detected the first evidence of YFV re-emergence in the third transmission season (2018-2019) in a dying howler monkey from the central region of the RJ state. The YFV detected in 2019 has the molecular signature associated with the current SE YFV outbreak and exhibited a close phylogenetic relationship with the YFV lineage that circulated in the same Atlantic Forest fragment during the past seasons. This lineage circulated along the coastal side of the Serra do Mar mountain chain, and its evolution seems to be mainly driven by genetic drift. The potential bridge vector Aedes albopictus was found probing on the recently dead howler monkey in the forest edge, very close to urban areas. MAIN CONCLUSIONS Collectively, our data revealed that YFV transmission persisted at the same Atlantic Forest area for at least three consecutive transmission seasons without the need of new introductions. Our real-time surveillance strategy permitted health authorities to take preventive actions within 48 h after the detection of the sick non-human primate. The local virus persistence and the proximity of the epizootic forest to urban areas reinforces the concern with regards to the risk of re-urbanisation and seasonal re-emergence of YFV, stressing the need for continuous effective surveillance and high vaccination coverage in the SE region, particularly in RJ, an important tourist location.


Subject(s)
Yellow Fever/therapy , Amino Acid Transport Systems , Mosquito Vectors/pathogenicity , Alouatta , Phylogeography
7.
Rev Saude Publica ; 51: 51, 2017 Jun 26.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28678905

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To propose a new operational unit in the locality scale capable of subsidizing the construction of an information system to control the transmission of tegumentary leishmaniasis at this scale, in a region of high endemicity of the Atlantic Forest. METHODS: We examined the adequacy of data and instruments in an area of high endemicity in the Atlantic Forest located in the South of the State of Rio de Janeiro from 1990 to 2012. The study proposed an operational unit called Local Surveillance Unit to make all used databases compatible by adjusting census sectors. This enabled the overlap and comparison of information in different periods. RESULTS: The spreading process of the transmission of tegumentary leishmaniasis in the Baía da Ilha Grande region does not depend on great population movements, and can occur in areas with population growth or decrease. The data information system allowed the adequate identification and characterization of the place of residence. We identified relevant characteristics of the place of transmission, such as self-limited in time and not associated with recent deforestation. The results also highlight the lack of synchronicity in the case production in territorial units involved in the endemic-epidemic process, noting that this process is in constant motion. CONCLUSIONS: The transmission process seems more connected to the presence and movement of rodents that move continuously in the region than to the local density of vectors or the permanence of infected dogs at home. New control strategies targeted at the foci of transmission must be considered. The construction of a new operational unit, called Local Surveillance Unit, was instrumental in the endemic-epidemic process analysis. OBJETIVO: Propor uma nova unidade operacional na escala de localidade capaz de subsidiar a construção de um sistema de informação orientado para o controle da transmissão da leishmaniose tegumentar nesse nível. MÉTODOS: Uma região de alta endemicidade da Mata Atlântica no sul do estado do Rio de Janeiro de 1990 a 2012 foi selecionada para analisar a adequação dos dados e instrumentos. Uma unidade operacional denominada Unidade de Vigilância Local foi proposta para compatibilizar todos os bancos de dados utilizados por meio de ajustes dos setores censitários. Isso possibilitou a sobreposição das informações e a sua comparação em diferentes períodos. RESULTADOS: O processo de deslocamento da transmissão da leishmaniose tegumentar na região da Baía da Ilha Grande não dependeu de movimentos populacionais importantes, podendo ocorrer tanto em áreas com crescimento como em áreas com decremento populacional. Os dados do sistema de informação permitiram a identificação e caracterização adequada do local de residência. Identificaram-se características relevantes do lugar de transmissão, como autolimitados no tempo e não associados a desmatamentos recentes. Os resultados evidenciam também a falta de sincronicidade na produção de casos nas unidades territoriais envolvidas no processo endêmico-epidêmico, mostrando que esse processo está em constante movimento. CONCLUSÕES: O processo de transmissão parece estar mais ligado à presença e circulação de roedores que se desloquem continuadamente na região do que da densidade local de vetores ou da permanência de cães infectados no domicílio. Novas estratégias de controle orientadas para os focos de transmissão devem ser consideradas. A construção de uma nova unidade operacional, denominada Unidade de Vigilância Local, foi fundamental na análise do processo endêmico-epidêmico.


Subject(s)
Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/epidemiology , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/transmission , Animals , Brazil/epidemiology , Geographic Mapping , Humans , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/prevention & control , Spatio-Temporal Analysis
8.
Rev. saúde pública (Online) ; 51: 51, 2017. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-903182

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT OBJECTIVE To propose a new operational unit in the locality scale capable of subsidizing the construction of an information system to control the transmission of tegumentary leishmaniasis at this scale, in a region of high endemicity of the Atlantic Forest. METHODS We examined the adequacy of data and instruments in an area of high endemicity in the Atlantic Forest located in the South of the State of Rio de Janeiro from 1990 to 2012. The study proposed an operational unit called Local Surveillance Unit to make all used databases compatible by adjusting census sectors. This enabled the overlap and comparison of information in different periods. RESULTS The spreading process of the transmission of tegumentary leishmaniasis in the Baía da Ilha Grande region does not depend on great population movements, and can occur in areas with population growth or decrease. The data information system allowed the adequate identification and characterization of the place of residence. We identified relevant characteristics of the place of transmission, such as self-limited in time and not associated with recent deforestation. The results also highlight the lack of synchronicity in the case production in territorial units involved in the endemic-epidemic process, noting that this process is in constant motion. CONCLUSIONS The transmission process seems more connected to the presence and movement of rodents that move continuously in the region than to the local density of vectors or the permanence of infected dogs at home. New control strategies targeted at the foci of transmission must be considered. The construction of a new operational unit, called Local Surveillance Unit, was instrumental in the endemic-epidemic process analysis.


RESUMO OBJETIVO Propor uma nova unidade operacional na escala de localidade capaz de subsidiar a construção de um sistema de informação orientado para o controle da transmissão da leishmaniose tegumentar nesse nível. MÉTODOS Uma região de alta endemicidade da Mata Atlântica no sul do estado do Rio de Janeiro de 1990 a 2012 foi selecionada para analisar a adequação dos dados e instrumentos. Uma unidade operacional denominada Unidade de Vigilância Local foi proposta para compatibilizar todos os bancos de dados utilizados por meio de ajustes dos setores censitários. Isso possibilitou a sobreposição das informações e a sua comparação em diferentes períodos. RESULTADOS O processo de deslocamento da transmissão da leishmaniose tegumentar na região da Baía da Ilha Grande não dependeu de movimentos populacionais importantes, podendo ocorrer tanto em áreas com crescimento como em áreas com decremento populacional. Os dados do sistema de informação permitiram a identificação e caracterização adequada do local de residência. Identificaram-se características relevantes do lugar de transmissão, como autolimitados no tempo e não associados a desmatamentos recentes. Os resultados evidenciam também a falta de sincronicidade na produção de casos nas unidades territoriais envolvidas no processo endêmico-epidêmico, mostrando que esse processo está em constante movimento. CONCLUSÕES O processo de transmissão parece estar mais ligado à presença e circulação de roedores que se desloquem continuadamente na região do que da densidade local de vetores ou da permanência de cães infectados no domicílio. Novas estratégias de controle orientadas para os focos de transmissão devem ser consideradas. A construção de uma nova unidade operacional, denominada Unidade de Vigilância Local, foi fundamental na análise do processo endêmico-epidêmico.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/transmission , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/epidemiology , Brazil/epidemiology , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/prevention & control , Geographic Mapping , Spatio-Temporal Analysis
9.
Primates ; 57(1): 123-7, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26467338

ABSTRACT

Here we report the first witnessed attack on a marmoset by a constrictor snake. The incident occurred mid-morning in a gallery forest within an altered landscape of the Cerrado region of central Brazil and refers to a fatal attack by a Boa constrictor on two juvenile black-tufted-ear marmosets (Callithrix penicillata) simultaneously. The snake captured both individuals at a height of ~ 4 m while a group of eight marmosets traveled through the subcanopy. The actual strike was not seen. After 2 min, the boa fell to the ground with both marmosets in its coils and proceeded to kill one animal at a time through constriction. Two adult marmosets immediately descended to where the snake held its victims on the ground and attacked it. The snake showed no apparent reaction, and after ~ 1-2 min, the adults rejoined the remaining group members that were mobbing and vocalizing from 5 to 6 m above. The group left the scene ~ 7 min after the onset of the attack and was not seen again. The snake loosened its coils 10 min after its initial strike, left the two carcasses on the ground and stayed behind a nearby tree. Thus, we are not sure if the victims were in fact ingested. This report confirms that marmosets are vulnerable to boid snakes and capable of highly organized and cooperative antipredation behavior. It also suggests that snakes pose a greater threat to callitrichids than previously thought.


Subject(s)
Boidae/physiology , Callithrix/physiology , Food Chain , Predatory Behavior , Animals , Brazil
10.
BMC Public Health ; 15: 746, 2015 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26243266

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We identified dengue transmission areas by using the Geographic Information Systems located at local surveillance units of the Itaboraí municipality in state of Rio de Janeiro. We considered the association among the house infestation index, the disease incidence, and sociodemographic indicators during a prominent dengue outbreak in 2007 and 2008. METHODS: In this ecological study, the Local Surveillance Units (UVLs) of the municipality were used as spatial pattern units. For the house analysis, we used the period of higher vector density that occurred previous to the larger magnitude epidemic range of dengue cases. The average dengue incidence rates calculated in this epidemic range were smoothed using the Bayesian method. The associations among the House Infestation Index (HI), the Bayesian rate of the average dengue incidence, and the sociodemographic indicators were evaluated using a Pearson's correlation coefficient. The areas that were at a higher risk of dengue occurrence were detected using a kernel density estimation with the kernel quartic function. RESULTS: The dengue transmission pattern in Itaboraí showed that the increase in the vector density preceded the increase in incidence. The HI was positively correlated to the Bayesian dengue incidence rate (r = 0.641; p = 0.01). The higher risk areas were those that were close to the main highways. In the Kernel density estimation analysis, we observed that the regions that were at a higher risk of dengue were those that were located in the UVLs and had the highest population densities; these locations were typically located along major highways. Four nuclei were identified as epicenters of high risk. CONCLUSIONS: The spatial analysis units used in this research, i.e., UVLs, served as a methodological resource for examining the compatibility of different information sources concerning the disease, the vector indices, and the municipal sociodemographic aspects and were arranged in distinct cartographic bases. Dengue is a multi-scale geographic phenomenon, and using the UVLs as analysis units made it possible to differentiate the dengue occurrence throughout the municipality. The methodological approach used in this research helped improve the Itaboraí municipality monitoring activities and the local territorial monitoring in other municipalities that are affected by this public health issue.


Subject(s)
Dengue/epidemiology , Dengue/transmission , Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data , Insect Vectors , Population Density , Aedes , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Brazil/epidemiology , Dengue Virus/isolation & purification , Geographic Information Systems , Humans , Incidence , Socioeconomic Factors , Spatial Analysis
11.
Niterói, RJ; s.n; 2012. 67 p. ilus, mapas, tab, graf.
Thesis in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-744991

ABSTRACT

A dengue é considerada a mais importante doença viral transmitida por mosquitos no mundo. Diversos fatores combinados produzem condições epidemiológicas favoráveis a transmissão do vírus pelo mosquito Aedes aegypti, tais como: o rápido crescimento da migração rural-urbana, infraestrutura urbana básica inadequada (por exemplo, armazenar água em recipientes perto das casas) e aumento do volume de resíduo sólidos, tais como embalagens plásticas descartadas e outros objetos abandonados que fornecem habitats de larvas em áreas urbanas. Esse estudo teve como objetivo análisar a distribuição espacial e temporal da infestação domiciliar por Aedes aegypti, considerando a ocorrência dos casos de dengue e buscando associá-los aos indicadores sociodemográficos no município de Itaboraí, Rio de Janeiro. Foram utilizadas varáveis sobre as características de infraestrutura urbana (lixo, abastecimento de água, esgotamento sanitário) e de escolaridade e sexo, disponíveis para o Censo Demográfico de 2010 (IBGE) para o cálculo dos indicadores sociodemográficos...


Dengue is considered the most important viral disease transmitted by mosquitoes in the world. Several factors combine to produce conditions favorable epidemiological virus transmission by the mosquito Aedes aegypti, such as the rapid growth of rural-urban migration, inadequate basic urban infrastructure (eg, store water in containers near homes) and increased volume of waste solids such as plastic containers and other discarded objects left that provide larval habitats in urban areas. This study aimed to analyze the spatial and temporal distribution of domiciliary infestation by Aedes aegypti, considering the occurrence of dengue cases and seeking to associate themselves with sociodemographic indicators in Itaboraí, Rio de Janeiro. Variables were used on the characteristics of urban infrastructure (garbage, water, sewage) and education and sex, available for the 2010 Demographic Census (IBGE) for the calculation of demographic indicators...


Subject(s)
Humans , Aedes , Dengue/epidemiology , Dengue/transmission , Local Health Systems , Geographic Information Systems/statistics & numerical data , Demography/statistics & numerical data , Incidence
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