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理解英格兰和威尔士 1918-1919 年流感大流行中的死亡率。

Understanding mortality in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic in England and Wales.

机构信息

Vaccine & Immunisation Research Group, Melbourne School of Population Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic., Australia.

出版信息

Influenza Other Respir Viruses. 2011 Mar;5(2):89-98. doi: 10.1111/j.1750-2659.2010.00186.x. Epub 2010 Nov 3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The causes of recurrent waves in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic are not fully understood.

OBJECTIVES

To identify the risk factors for influenza onset, spread and mortality in waves 1, 2 and 3 (summer, autumn and winter) in England and Wales in 1918-1919.

METHODS

Influenza mortality rates for 333 population units and putative risk factors were analysed by correlation and by regressions weighted by population size and adjusted for spatial trends.

RESULTS

For waves 1 and 3, influenza mortality was higher in younger, northerly and socially disadvantaged populations experiencing higher all-cause mortality in 1911-1914. Influenza mortality was greatest in wave 2, but less dependent on underlying population characteristics. Wave duration was shorter in areas with higher influenza mortality, typically associated with increasing population density. Regression analyses confirmed the importance of geographical factors and pre-pandemic mortality for all three waves. Age effects were complex, with the suggestion that younger populations with greater mortality in wave 1 had lesser mortality in wave 2.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings suggest that socially disadvantaged populations were more vulnerable, that older populations were partially protected by prior immunity in wave 1 and that exposure of (younger) populations in one wave could protect against mortality in the subsequent wave. An increase in viral virulence could explain the greater mortality in wave 2. Further modelling of causal processes will help to explain, in considerable detail, how social and geographical factors, season, pre-existing and acquired immunity and virulence affected viral transmission and pandemic mortality in 1918-1919.

摘要

背景

1918-1919 年流感大流行中反复出现波峰的原因尚未完全阐明。

目的

在 1918-1919 年,确定英格兰和威尔士流感在第 1、2 和 3 波(夏季、秋季和冬季)中发病、传播和死亡的风险因素。

方法

通过相关性和按人口规模加权的回归分析,对 333 个人口单位的流感死亡率和假定的风险因素进行分析,并对空间趋势进行调整。

结果

第 1 和第 3 波的流感死亡率在年龄较小、处于北方、社会地位较低的人群中较高,这些人群在 1911-1914 年的全因死亡率较高。第 2 波的流感死亡率最高,但与基础人群特征的相关性较小。流感死亡率较高的地区波持续时间较短,通常与人口密度增加有关。回归分析证实了地理因素和大流行前死亡率对所有 3 个波的重要性。年龄效应较为复杂,提示第 1 波中死亡率较高的年轻人群在第 2 波中的死亡率较低。

结论

我们的研究结果表明,社会地位较低的人群更易受感染,第 1 波中年龄较大的人群部分受到先前免疫的保护,而在一个波中暴露的(年轻)人群可能会对后续波的死亡率起到保护作用。病毒毒力的增加可能解释了第 2 波死亡率较高的原因。进一步的因果过程建模将有助于详细解释社会和地理因素、季节、预先存在的和获得的免疫以及毒力如何影响 1918-1919 年病毒传播和大流行死亡率。

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