Coelho Flávio Codeço, Armstrong Margaret, Saraceni Valeria, Lemos Cristina
Center for Mathematical Epidemiology, School of Applied Mathematics, Fundação Getúlio Vargas, Brasília, Brazil.
Prefeitura da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Front Public Health. 2017 Nov 29;5:317. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00317. eCollection 2017.
The Zika virus (ZIKV) spread rapidly in Brazil in 2015 and 2016. Rio de Janeiro was among the Brazilian cities which were hit the hardest, with more that a hundred thousand confirmed cases up to the end of 2016. Given the severity of the neurological damage caused by ZIKV on fetuses, we wondered whether it would also cause an increase in the number of miscarriages, especially very early ones. As early miscarriages are unlikely to be recorded as a health event, this effect-if it occurred-would only show up as a reduction in the number of live births. In this article, we show that there was a 15% drop in live births between September and December 2016 compared with the previous year, and that this sharp drop from epidemiological week 33 onward is strongly correlated with the number of recorded cases of Zika about 40 weeks earlier. We postulate that ZIKV is directly responsible for this drop in the birth rate. Further work is required to ascertain whether other factors such as the fear of having a microcephaly baby or the economic crisis are having a significant effect.
寨卡病毒(ZIKV)在2015年和2016年于巴西迅速传播。里约热内卢是巴西受影响最严重的城市之一,截至2016年底,确诊病例超过十万例。鉴于寨卡病毒对胎儿造成的神经损伤的严重性,我们想知道它是否也会导致流产数量增加,尤其是早期流产。由于早期流产不太可能被记录为健康事件,这种影响(如果发生的话)只会表现为活产数量的减少。在本文中,我们表明,与上一年相比,2016年9月至12月的活产数量下降了15%,并且从第33周起的这种急剧下降与约40周前记录的寨卡病例数量密切相关。我们推测寨卡病毒是导致出生率下降的直接原因。还需要进一步的研究来确定其他因素,如对生出小头畸形婴儿的恐惧或经济危机是否有重大影响。