@article{28284, keywords = {water, Socioeconomic Factors, Models, Statistical, Humans, Global health, Geography, Disease Outbreaks, Demography, Databases, Factual, Communicable Diseases}, author = {Yang K and LeJeune J and Alsdorf D and Lu B and Shum C K and Liang S}, title = {Global distribution of outbreaks of water-associated infectious diseases.}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Water plays an important role in the transmission of many infectious diseases, which pose a great burden on global public health. However, the global distribution of these water-associated infectious diseases and underlying factors remain largely unexplored.

METHODS AND FINDINGS: Based on the Global Infectious Disease and Epidemiology Network (GIDEON), a global database including water-associated pathogens and diseases was developed. In this study, reported outbreak events associated with corresponding water-associated infectious diseases from 1991 to 2008 were extracted from the database. The location of each reported outbreak event was identified and geocoded into a GIS database. Also collected in the GIS database included geo-referenced socio-environmental information including population density (2000), annual accumulated temperature, surface water area, and average annual precipitation. Poisson models with Bayesian inference were developed to explore the association between these socio-environmental factors and distribution of the reported outbreak events. Based on model predictions a global relative risk map was generated. A total of 1,428 reported outbreak events were retrieved from the database. The analysis suggested that outbreaks of water-associated diseases are significantly correlated with socio-environmental factors. Population density is a significant risk factor for all categories of reported outbreaks of water-associated diseases; water-related diseases (e.g., vector-borne diseases) are associated with accumulated temperature; water-washed diseases (e.g., conjunctivitis) are inversely related to surface water area; both water-borne and water-related diseases are inversely related to average annual rainfall. Based on the model predictions, "hotspots" of risks for all categories of water-associated diseases were explored.

CONCLUSIONS: At the global scale, water-associated infectious diseases are significantly correlated with socio-environmental factors, impacting all regions which are affected disproportionately by different categories of water-associated infectious diseases.

}, year = {2012}, journal = {PLoS neglected tropical diseases}, volume = {6}, pages = {e1483}, issn = {1935-2735}, url = {http://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article/asset?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0001483.PDF}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pntd.0001483}, language = {eng}, }