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在巴拿马共和国的古纳雅拉,在消除疟疾之前,气候波动和疟疾传播动态。

Climatic fluctuations and malaria transmission dynamics, prior to elimination, in Guna Yala, República de Panamá.

机构信息

Unidad de Análisis Epidemiológico y Bioestadísticas, Instituto Commemorativo Gorgas de Estudios de la Salud, Panamá, República de Panamá.

Departamento de Investigación en Parasitología, Instituto Commemorativo Gorgas de Estudios de la Salud, Panamá, República de Panamá.

出版信息

Malar J. 2018 Feb 20;17(1):85. doi: 10.1186/s12936-018-2235-3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Malaria has historically been entrenched in indigenous populations of the República de Panamá. This scenario occurs despite the fact that successful methods for malaria elimination were developed during the creation of the Panamá Canal. Today, most malaria cases in the República de Panamá affect the Gunas, an indigenous group, which mainly live in autonomous regions of eastern Panamá. Over recent decades several malaria outbreaks have affected the Gunas, and one hypothesis is that such outbreaks could have been exacerbated by climate change, especially by anomalous weather patterns driven by the EL Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO).

RESULTS

Monthly malaria cases in Guna Yala (1998-2016) were autocorrelated up to 2 months of lag, likely reflecting parasite transmission cycles between humans and mosquitoes, and cyclically for periods of 4 months that might reflect relapses of Plasmodium vivax, the dominant malaria parasite transmitted in Panamá. Moreover, malaria case number was positively associated (P < 0.05) with rainfall (7 months of lag), and negatively with the El Niño 4 index (15 months of lag) and the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, NDVI (8 months of lag), the sign and magnitude of these associations likely related to the impacts of weather patterns and vegetation on the ecology of Anopheles albimanus, the main malaria vector in Guna Yala. Interannual cycles, of approximately 4-year periods, in monthly malaria case numbers were associated with the El Niño 4 index, a climatic index associated with weather and vegetation dynamics in Guna Yala at seasonal and interannual time scales.

CONCLUSION

The results showed that ENSO, rainfall and NDVI were associated with the number of malaria cases in Guna Yala during the study period. These results highlight the vulnerability of Guna populations to malaria, an infection sensitive to climate change, and call for further studies about weather impacts on malaria vector ecology, as well as the association of malaria vectors with Gunas paying attention to their socio-economic conditions of poverty and cultural differences as an ethnic minority.

摘要

背景

疟疾在巴拿马共和国的土著居民中一直根深蒂固。尽管在巴拿马运河建设期间已经开发出成功的疟疾消除方法,但这种情况仍在发生。如今,巴拿马共和国的大多数疟疾病例都影响到了瓜纳人,他们是一个主要居住在巴拿马东部自治区的土著群体。在过去几十年中,瓜纳人多次受到疟疾爆发的影响,有一种假设是,这种爆发可能因气候变化而加剧,特别是由厄尔尼诺南方涛动(ENSO)引起的异常天气模式。

结果

1998 年至 2016 年期间,瓜纳雅拉的月疟疾病例具有 2 个月的自相关性,这可能反映了人类和蚊子之间寄生虫传播周期,并且以 4 个月为周期周期性发生,这可能反映了在巴拿马传播的主要疟原虫间日疟原虫的复发。此外,疟疾病例数量与降雨量呈正相关(P<0.05)(滞后 7 个月),与厄尔尼诺 4 指数(滞后 15 个月)和归一化植被指数(NDVI)呈负相关(滞后 8 个月),这些关联的符号和大小可能与天气模式和植被对瓜纳雅拉主要疟疾传播媒介按蚊生态的影响有关。每月疟疾病例数量的年际周期约为 4 年,与厄尔尼诺 4 指数相关,该指数与瓜纳雅拉的季节性和年际天气和植被动态有关。

结论

结果表明,在研究期间,ENSO、降雨量和 NDVI 与瓜纳雅拉的疟疾病例数量有关。这些结果突出表明,瓜纳人易受疟疾感染的影响,而疟疾对气候变化敏感,因此需要进一步研究天气对疟疾媒介生态的影响,以及疟疾媒介与瓜纳人的联系,同时要关注他们贫困的社会经济条件和作为少数民族的文化差异。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d3bc/5819664/c993de7c064e/12936_2018_2235_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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