Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
Int J Health Geogr. 2012 Aug 28;11:37. doi: 10.1186/1476-072X-11-37.
Socioeconomic factors are increasingly recognised as related to health inequalities in Germany and are also identified as important contributing factors for an increased risk of acquiring infections. The aim of the present study was to describe in an ecological analysis the impact of different social factors on the risk of acquiring infectious diseases in an urban setting. The specific outcome of interest was the distribution of Rotavirus infections, which are a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis among infants and also a burden in the elderly in Germany. The results may help to generate more specific hypothesis for infectious disease transmission.
We analysed the spatial distribution of hospitalized patients with Rotavirus infections in Berlin, Germany. The association between the small area incidence and different socio-demographic and economic variables was investigated in order to identify spatial relations and risk factors. Our spatial analysis included 447 neighbourhood areas of similar population size in the city of Berlin. We included all laboratory-confirmed cases of patients hospitalized due to Rotavirus infections and notified between 01/01/2007 and 31/12/2009. We excluded travel-associated and nosocomial infections. A spatial Bayesian Poisson regression model was used for the statistical analysis of incidences at neighbourhood level in relation to socio-demographic variables.
Altogether, 2,370 patients fulfilled the case definition. The disease mapping indicates a number of urban quarters to be highly affected by the disease. In the multivariable spatial regression model, two risk factors were identified for infants (<4 year olds): Rotavirus incidence increased by 4.95% for each additional percent of unemployed inhabitants in the neighbourhood (95% credibility interval (CI): 3.10%-6.74%) and by 0.53% for each additional percent of children attending day care in the neighbourhood (95% CI: 0.00%-1.06%). We found no evidence for an association with the proportion of foreign residents, population density, the residential quality of accommodations and resident changes in the neighbourhood.
Neighbourhoods with a high unemployment rate and high day care attendance rate appear to be particularly affected by Rotavirus in the population of Berlin. Public health promotion programs should be developed for the affected areas. Due to the ecological study-design, risk pathways on an individual patient level remain to be elucidated.
在德国,社会经济因素日益被认为与健康不平等有关,也被认为是导致感染风险增加的重要因素。本研究旨在通过生态分析描述不同社会因素对城市环境中传染病感染风险的影响。本研究的具体结果是轮状病毒感染的分布,轮状病毒是德国婴幼儿急性肠胃炎的主要病因,也是老年人的负担。研究结果可能有助于针对传染病传播提出更具体的假设。
我们分析了德国柏林因轮状病毒感染住院患者的空间分布。为了确定空间关系和风险因素,我们调查了小区域发病率与不同社会人口和经济变量之间的关系。我们的空间分析包括柏林市 447 个具有相似人口规模的邻里区域。我们纳入了所有实验室确诊的因轮状病毒感染住院的患者病例,这些病例的报告时间为 2007 年 1 月 1 日至 2009 年 12 月 31 日。我们排除了与旅行和医院获得性相关的感染病例。我们采用空间贝叶斯泊松回归模型对邻里层面的发病率与社会人口学变量的关系进行统计分析。
共有 2370 名患者符合病例定义。疾病分布表明,一些城市区域受到该疾病的严重影响。在多变量空间回归模型中,我们确定了两个婴儿(<4 岁)的风险因素:邻里中每增加 1%的失业居民,轮状病毒发病率增加 4.95%(95%可信区间:3.10%-6.74%);每增加 1%的儿童在邻里中接受日托,轮状病毒发病率增加 0.53%(95%可信区间:0.00%-1.06%)。我们没有发现与外国居民比例、人口密度、住宿质量和邻里居民变化之间存在关联的证据。
失业率高和日托出勤率高的邻里似乎特别容易受到柏林居民轮状病毒的影响。应针对受影响地区制定公共卫生促进计划。由于采用了生态研究设计,个体患者层面的风险途径仍有待阐明。