School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Level 3, Samuels Building, Botany Road, Kensington, New South Wales 2052, Australia; National Environment Agency, 40 Scotts Road, #13-00, 228231, Singapore.
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Level 3, Samuels Building, Botany Road, Kensington, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Oct 15;639:1261-1267. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.254. Epub 2018 May 26.
Climate change is expected to bring about global warming and an increase in the frequency of extreme weather events. This may consequently influence the transmission of food-borne diseases. The short term associations between climatic conditions and Salmonella infections are well documented in temperate climates but not in the tropics. We conducted an ecological time series analysis to estimate the short term associations between non-outbreak, non-travel associated reports of Salmonella infections and observed climatic conditions from 2005 to 2015 for Singapore. We used a negative binomial time series regression model to analyse the associations on a weekly scale, controlling for season, long term trend, delayed weather effects, autocorrelation and the period where Salmonella was made legally notifiable. There were a total of 11,324 Salmonella infections reported during our study period. A 1 °C increase in mean ambient air temperature was associated with a 4.3% increase (Incidence Rate Ratio [IRR]: 1.043, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.003, 1.084) in reported Salmonella infections in the same week and a 6.3% increase (IRR: 1.063, 95% CI = 1.022, 1.105) three weeks later. A 1% increase in the mean relative humidity was associated with a 1.3% decrease (IRR: 0.987, 95% CI = 0.981, 0.994) in cases six weeks later, while a 10 mm increase in weekly cumulative rainfall was associated with a 0.8% increase (IRR: 1.008, 95% CI = 1.002, 1.015) in cases 2 weeks later but a 0.9% decrease (IRR: 0.991, 95% CI = 0.984, 0.998) in cases 5 weeks later. No thresholds for these weather effects were detected. This study confirms the short-term influence of climatic conditions on Salmonella infections in Singapore and the potential impact of climate change on Salmonellosis in the tropics.
气候变化预计将带来全球变暖以及极端天气事件发生频率的增加。这可能会影响食源性疾病的传播。在温带气候条件下,气候因素与沙门氏菌感染之间的短期关联已有充分记录,但在热带地区却没有。我们进行了一项生态时间序列分析,以估计 2005 年至 2015 年期间新加坡非暴发、非旅行相关的沙门氏菌感染报告与观察到的气候条件之间的短期关联。我们使用负二项式时间序列回归模型,每周进行一次关联分析,同时控制季节、长期趋势、滞后天气效应、自相关以及沙门氏菌被合法报告的时间段。在我们的研究期间,共报告了 11324 例沙门氏菌感染。环境空气温度平均升高 1°C,与当周报告的沙门氏菌感染增加 4.3%(发病率比 [IRR]:1.043,95%置信区间 [CI]:1.003,1.084)有关,三周后增加 6.3%(IRR:1.063,95%CI:1.022,1.105)。平均相对湿度增加 1%,与六周后病例减少 1.3%有关(IRR:0.987,95%CI:0.981,0.994),而每周累计降雨量增加 10 毫米,与两周后病例增加 0.8%有关(IRR:1.008,95%CI:1.002,1.015),但五周后病例减少 0.9%(IRR:0.991,95%CI:0.984,0.998)。未检测到这些天气效应的阈值。本研究证实了气候条件对新加坡沙门氏菌感染的短期影响,以及气候变化对热带地区沙门氏菌病的潜在影响。