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瑞典历史疟疾病例的时空分布:气候视角。

The spatiotemporal distribution of historical malaria cases in Sweden: a climatic perspective.

机构信息

Regional Climate Group, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Gothenburg, 405 30, Gothenburg, Sweden.

Department of History, Stockholm University, 106 91, Stockholm, Sweden.

出版信息

Malar J. 2021 May 1;20(1):212. doi: 10.1186/s12936-021-03744-9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Understanding of the impacts of climatic variability on human health remains poor despite a possibly increasing burden of vector-borne diseases under global warming. Numerous socioeconomic variables make such studies challenging during the modern period while studies of climate-disease relationships in historical times are constrained by a lack of long datasets. Previous studies have identified the occurrence of malaria vectors, and their dependence on climate variables, during historical times in northern Europe. Yet, malaria in Sweden in relation to climate variables is understudied and relationships have never been rigorously statistically established. This study seeks to examine the relationship between malaria and climate fluctuations, and to characterise the spatio-temporal variations at parish level during severe malaria years in Sweden 1749-1859.

METHODS

Symptom-based annual malaria case/death data were obtained from nationwide parish records and military hospital records in Stockholm. Pearson (r) and Spearman's rank (r) correlation analyses were conducted to evaluate inter-annual relationship between malaria data and long meteorological series. The climate response to larger malaria events was further explored by Superposed Epoch Analysis, and through Geographic Information Systems analysis to map spatial variations of malaria deaths.

RESULTS

The number of malaria deaths showed the most significant positive relationship with warm-season temperature of the preceding year. The strongest correlation was found between malaria deaths and the mean temperature of the preceding June-August (r = 0.57, p < 0.01) during the 1756-1820 period. Only non-linear patterns can be found in response to precipitation variations. Most malaria hot-spots, during severe malaria years, concentrated in areas around big inland lakes and southern-most Sweden.

CONCLUSIONS

Unusually warm and/or dry summers appear to have contributed to malaria epidemics due to both indoor winter transmission and the evidenced long incubation and relapse time of P. vivax, but the results also highlight the difficulties in modelling climate-malaria associations. The inter-annual spatial variation of malaria hot-spots further shows that malaria outbreaks were more pronounced in the southern-most region of Sweden in the first half of the nineteenth century compared to the second half of the eighteenth century.

摘要

背景

尽管在全球变暖的情况下,虫媒病的负担可能增加,但人们对气候变异性对人类健康的影响仍然知之甚少。在现代时期,许多社会经济变量使得此类研究具有挑战性,而在历史时期研究气候与疾病之间的关系则受到缺乏长期数据集的限制。以前的研究已经确定了在北欧历史时期疟疾媒介的发生及其对气候变量的依赖。然而,瑞典与气候变量相关的疟疾研究不足,而且从未严格地从统计学上建立过关系。本研究旨在检验疟疾与气候波动之间的关系,并描述瑞典 1749-1859 年严重疟疾年份 parish 级别的时空变化。

方法

从全国 parish 记录和斯德哥尔摩军事医院记录中获得基于症状的年度疟疾病例/死亡数据。进行 Pearson(r)和 Spearman 秩(r)相关分析,以评估疟疾数据与长气象序列之间的年际关系。通过叠加分析进一步探讨了气候对较大疟疾事件的响应,并通过地理信息系统分析绘制疟疾死亡的空间变化。

结果

疟疾死亡人数与前一年暖季温度呈最显著的正相关。在 1756-1820 年期间,发现疟疾死亡与前一年 6-8 月的平均温度之间存在最强的相关性(r=0.57,p<0.01)。只有在响应降水变化时才能找到非线性模式。在严重疟疾年份,大多数疟疾热点集中在内陆大湖周围和瑞典最南端的地区。

结论

异常温暖和/或干燥的夏季似乎导致了疟疾流行,这既是由于室内冬季传播,也是由于证据表明间日疟原虫的潜伏期和复发时间较长,但结果也突出了建模气候-疟疾关联的困难。疟疾热点的年际空间变化进一步表明,与 18 世纪后半叶相比,19 世纪上半叶瑞典最南端地区的疟疾爆发更为明显。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/797b/8088552/53fe14a7736d/12936_2021_3744_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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