Martinez Pamela P, King Aaron A, Yunus Mohammad, Faruque A S G, Pascual Mercedes
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637;
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; Department of Mathematics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 12;113(15):4092-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1518977113. Epub 2016 Mar 28.
The role of climate forcing in the population dynamics of infectious diseases has typically been revealed via retrospective analyses of incidence records aggregated across space and, in particular, over whole cities. Here, we focus on the transmission dynamics of rotavirus, the main diarrheal disease in infants and young children, within the megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh. We identify two zones, the densely urbanized core and the more rural periphery, that respond differentially to flooding. Moreover, disease seasonality differs substantially between these regions, spanning variation comparable to the variation from tropical to temperate regions. By combining process-based models with an extensive disease surveillance record, we show that the response to climate forcing is mainly seasonal in the core, where a more endemic transmission resulting from an asymptomatic reservoir facilitates the response to the monsoons. The force of infection in this monsoon peak can be an order of magnitude larger than the force of infection in the more epidemic periphery, which exhibits little or no postmonsoon outbreak in a pattern typical of nearby rural areas. A typically smaller peak during the monsoon season nevertheless shows sensitivity to interannual variability in flooding. High human density in the core is one explanation for enhanced transmission during troughs and an associated seasonal monsoon response in this diarrheal disease, which unlike cholera, has not been widely viewed as climate-sensitive. Spatial demographic, socioeconomic, and environmental heterogeneity can create reservoirs of infection and enhance the sensitivity of disease systems to climate forcing, especially in the populated cities of the developing world.
气候强迫在传染病种群动态中的作用通常是通过对跨空间(特别是整个城市)汇总的发病率记录进行回顾性分析来揭示的。在此,我们聚焦于孟加拉国达卡这座特大城市内轮状病毒(婴幼儿主要腹泻疾病)的传播动态。我们识别出两个区域,即高度城市化的核心区和较为乡村化的周边区,它们对洪水的反应有所不同。此外,这些区域的疾病季节性差异很大,其跨度变化与从热带到温带地区的变化相当。通过将基于过程的模型与广泛的疾病监测记录相结合,我们表明,在核心区,对气候强迫的反应主要是季节性的,在那里,无症状感染源导致的地方流行传播更有利于对季风的反应。在这个季风高峰期的感染强度可能比疫情更严重的周边区的感染强度大一个数量级,周边区在季风后几乎没有或没有疫情爆发,呈现出附近农村地区典型的模式。然而,季风季节通常较小的高峰显示出对洪水年际变化的敏感性。核心区较高的人口密度是这种腹泻疾病在低谷期传播增强以及相关季节性季风反应的一个解释,这种疾病与霍乱不同,尚未被广泛视为对气候敏感。空间人口、社会经济和环境的异质性会形成感染源,并增强疾病系统对气候强迫的敏感性,尤其是在发展中世界人口密集的城市。