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. 2016 Jan 25;11(1):e0147054.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147054. eCollection 2016.

Short-Term Effects of Climatic Variables on Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease in Mainland China, 2008-2013: A Multilevel Spatial Poisson Regression Model Accounting for Overdispersion

Affiliations

Short-Term Effects of Climatic Variables on Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease in Mainland China, 2008-2013: A Multilevel Spatial Poisson Regression Model Accounting for Overdispersion

Jiaqiang Liao et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease (HFMD) is a worldwide infectious disease. In China, many provinces have reported HFMD cases, especially the south and southwest provinces. Many studies have found a strong association between the incidence of HFMD and climatic factors such as temperature, rainfall, and relative humidity. However, few studies have analyzed cluster effects between various geographical units.

Methods: The nonlinear relationships and lag effects between weekly HFMD cases and climatic variables were estimated for the period of 2008-2013 using a polynomial distributed lag model. The extra-Poisson multilevel spatial polynomial model was used to model the exact relationship between weekly HFMD incidence and climatic variables after considering cluster effects, provincial correlated structure of HFMD incidence and overdispersion. The smoothing spline methods were used to detect threshold effects between climatic factors and HFMD incidence.

Results: The HFMD incidence spatial heterogeneity distributed among provinces, and the scale measurement of overdispersion was 548.077. After controlling for long-term trends, spatial heterogeneity and overdispersion, temperature was highly associated with HFMD incidence. Weekly average temperature and weekly temperature difference approximate inverse "V" shape and "V" shape relationships associated with HFMD incidence. The lag effects for weekly average temperature and weekly temperature difference were 3 weeks and 2 weeks. High spatial correlated HFMD incidence were detected in northern, central and southern province. Temperature can be used to explain most of variation of HFMD incidence in southern and northeastern provinces. After adjustment for temperature, eastern and Northern provinces still had high variation HFMD incidence.

Conclusion: We found a relatively strong association between weekly HFMD incidence and weekly average temperature. The association between the HFMD incidence and climatic variables spatial heterogeneity distributed across provinces. Future research should explore the risk factors that cause spatial correlated structure or high variation of HFMD incidence which can be explained by temperature. When analyzing association between HFMD incidence and climatic variables, spatial heterogeneity among provinces should be evaluated. Moreover, the extra-Poisson multilevel model was capable of modeling the association between overdispersion of HFMD incidence and climatic variables.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Time series plot of weekly HFMD cases and climatic variables of China, 2008–2013.
Pcase (weekly reported cases of HFMD), avtemp (weekly average temperature (°C)), maxtemp (weekly maximum temperature (°C)), mintemp (weekly minimum temperature (°C)), rainfall (weekly average 20–20 hours rainfall (0.1 millimeters)), mavhmd (weekly average relative humidity (0.1%)), hsun (weekly average hours of sunshine (0.1hours)), mavwspeed (weekly average wind speed (meters per second)).
Fig 2
Fig 2. Relationship between climatic variables and HFMD incidence.
Relative changes of HFMD incidence as smooth spline function of avtemp (2a), devtemp (2b), mavhmd (2c) and hsun (2d). (Solid line: fitted values; dash line: 95% confidence interval of fitted value; Vertical bar located on x-axis: distribution of climatic variables).
Fig 3
Fig 3. Estimated RR for province.
Fig 3a. Estimated unadjusted spatial RR for provinces, Fig 3b. Estimated spatial structured RR for provinces, Fig 3c. Estimated random effects RR of avtemp for provinces, Fig 3d. Estimated spatial unstructured RR for provinces(Fig 3a RR generated from null multilevel model unadjustment for spatial correlated strucuture effects and climatic varialbes, Fig 3b–3d RR generated from final multilevel model adjustment for spatial correlated effects and climatic variables).

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Funding for HFMD cases diagnose and data analysis was supported by NO.2012LCLB02 (http://bjs.lclxbx.zdsys.zhaolizhi.cn/).

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