4.6 Article

Spatio-temporal dengue risk modelling in the south of Thailand: a Bayesian approach to dengue vulnerability

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.15619

Keywords

Bayesian inference; CARBayesST; Climate variables; Dengue risk; Nakhon Si Thammarat; Spatio-temporal modelling

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This study uses a Bayesian model and the CARBayesST package of R software to model the spatio-temporal epidemiology of dengue fever in the southern region of Thailand from 2002 to 2018. The results show that increasing temperature, rainy days, and sea level pressure are associated with higher occurrence and incidence risk of dengue, while increasing wind speed suggests a protective factor. The study also identifies high-risk districts for future prevention and control efforts.
Background. More than half of the global population is predicted to be living in areas susceptible to dengue transmission with the vast majority in Asia. Dengue fever is of public health concern, particularly in the southern region of Thailand due to favourable environmental factors for its spread. The risk of dengue infection at the population level varies in time and space among sub-populations thus, it is important to study the risk of infection considering spatio-temporal variation.Methods. This study presents a joint spatio-temporal epidemiological model in a Bayesian setting using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) simulation with the CARBayesST package of R software. For this purpose, monthly dengue records by district from 2002 to 2018 from the southern region of Thailand provided by the Ministry of Public Health of Thailand and eight environmental variables were used. Results.Results show that an increasing level of temperature, number of rainy days and sea level pressure are associated with a higher occurrence of dengue fever and consequently higher incidence risk, while an increasing level of wind speed seems to suggest a protective factor. Likewise, we found that the elevated risks of dengue in the immediate future are in the districts of Phipun, Phrom Kili, Lan Saka, Phra Phrom and Chaloem Phakiat. The resulting estimates provide insights into the effects of covariate risk factors, spatio-temporal trends and dengue-related health inequalities at the district level in southern Thailand.Conclusion. Possible implications are discussed considering some anthropogenic factors that could inhibit or enhance dengue occurrence. Risk maps indicated which districts are above and below baseline risk, allowing for the identification of local anomalies and high-risk boundaries. In the event of near future, the threat of elevated disease risk needs to be prevented and controlled considering the factors underlying the spread of mosquitoes in the Southeast Asian region.

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