Gleason Jessie A, Fagliano Jerald A
Environmental and Occupational Health Surveillance Program, New Jersey Department of Health, Trenton, NJ, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Mar 10;12(3):e0173794. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173794. eCollection 2017.
Gastrointestinal illness (GI) has been associated with heavy rainfall. Storm events and periods of heavy rainfall and runoff can result in increased microbiological contaminants in raw water. Surface water supplies are open to the environment and runoff can directly influence the presence of contaminants. A time-stratified bi-directional case-crossover study design was used to estimate associations of heavy rainfall and hospitalizations for GI. Cases of GI were identified as in-patient hospitalization with a primary diagnosis of infectious disease associated diarrhea [ICD-9 codes: specified gastrointestinal infections 001-009.9 or diarrhea 787.91] among the residents of New Jersey from 2009 to 2013 resulting in a final sample size of 47,527 cases. Two control days were selected on the same days of the week as the case day, within fixed 21-day strata. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios controlling for temperature and humidity. To determine potential effect modification estimates were stratified by season (warm or cold) and drinking water source (groundwater, surface water, or 'other' category). Stratified analyses by drinking water source and season identified positive associations of rainfall and GI hospitalizations in surface water systems during the warm season with no lag (OR = 1.12, 95% CI 1.05-1.19) and a 2-day lag (OR = 1.09, 95% CI 1.03-1.16). Positive associations in 'Other' water source areas (served by very small community water systems, private wells, or unknown) during the warm season with a 4-day lag were also found. However, there were no statistically significant positive associations in groundwater systems during the warm season. The results suggest that water systems with surface water sources can play an important role in preventing GI hospitalizations during and immediately following heavy rainfall. Regulators should work with water system providers to develop system specific prevention techniques to limit the impact of heavy rainfall on public health.
胃肠道疾病(GI)与暴雨有关。风暴事件以及暴雨和径流时期会导致原水中微生物污染物增加。地表水供应与环境相通,径流会直接影响污染物的存在。本研究采用时间分层双向病例交叉研究设计,以估计暴雨与因胃肠道疾病住院之间的关联。胃肠道疾病病例被确定为2009年至2013年新泽西州居民中主要诊断为感染性疾病相关性腹泻的住院患者[国际疾病分类第九版(ICD - 9)编码:特定胃肠道感染001 - 009.9或腹泻787.91],最终样本量为47,527例。在固定的21天分层内,选择与病例日为同一周中相同日期的两个对照日。采用条件逻辑回归来估计控制温度和湿度后的比值比。为了确定潜在的效应修饰,估计值按季节(温暖或寒冷)和饮用水源(地下水、地表水或“其他”类别)进行分层。按饮用水源和季节进行的分层分析表明,温暖季节地表水系统中降雨与胃肠道疾病住院之间存在无滞后的正相关(比值比 = 1.12,95%置信区间1.05 - 1.19)以及2天滞后的正相关(比值比 = 1.09,95%置信区间1.03 - 1.16)。在温暖季节“其他”水源地区(由非常小的社区供水系统、私人水井或未知水源供水)也发现了4天滞后的正相关。然而,温暖季节地下水系统中没有统计学上显著的正相关。结果表明,以地表水为水源的供水系统在预防暴雨期间及之后立即发生的胃肠道疾病住院方面可发挥重要作用。监管机构应与供水系统供应商合作,制定针对特定系统的预防技术,以限制暴雨对公众健康的影响。