Department of Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary and Alberta Health Services, Office 3683, 3500 - 26 Ave NE, Calgary, AB, T1Y 6J4, Canada.
Infection Prevention and Control, Calgary Zone, Alberta Health Services, Calgary, AB, Canada.
BMC Infect Dis. 2022 Nov 26;22(1):887. doi: 10.1186/s12879-022-07869-3.
Persons in Pakistan have suffered from various infectious diseases over the years, each impacted by various factors including climate change, seasonality, geopolitics, and resource availability. The COVID-19 pandemic is another complicating factor, with changes in the reported incidence of endemic infectious diseases and related syndromes under surveillance.
We assessed the monthly incidence of eight important infectious diseases/syndromes: acute upper respiratory infection (AURI), viral hepatitis, malaria, pneumonia, diarrhea, typhoid fever, measles, and neonatal tetanus (NNT), before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Administrative health data of monthly reported cases of these diseases/syndromes from all five provinces/regions of Pakistan for a 3-year interval (March 2018-February 2021) were analyzed using an interrupted time series approach. Reported monthly incidence for each infectious disease agent or syndrome and COVID-19 were subjected to time series visualization. Spearman's rank correlation coefficient between each infectious disease/syndrome and COVID-19 was calculated and median case numbers of each disease before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic were compared using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Subsequently, a generalized linear negative binomial regression model was developed to determine the association between reported cases of each disease and COVID-19.
In late February 2020, concurrent with the start of COVID-19, in all provinces, there were decreases in the reported incidence of the following diseases: AURI, pneumonia, hepatitis, diarrhea, typhoid, and measles. In contrast, the incidence of COVID was negatively associated with the reported incidence of NNT only in Punjab and Sindh, but not in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK), Balochistan, or Azad Jammu & Kashmir (AJK) & Gilgit Baltistan (GB). Similarly, COVID-19 was associated with a lowered incidence of malaria in Punjab, Sindh, and AJK & GB, but not in KPK and Balochistan.
COVID-19 was associated with a decreased reported incidence of most infectious diseases/syndromes studied in most provinces of Pakistan. However, exceptions included NNT in KPK, Balochistan and AJK & GB, and malaria in KPK and Balochistan. This general trend was attributed to a combination of resource diversion, misdiagnosis, misclassification, misinformation, and seasonal patterns of each disease.
多年来,巴基斯坦人民一直遭受各种传染病的困扰,这些传染病的发生受到气候变化、季节性变化、地缘政治和资源供应等多种因素的影响。新冠疫情是另一个复杂因素,受其影响,报告的地方性传染病发病率和相关综合征发生变化,这些都在监测范围内。
我们评估了 8 种重要传染病/综合征在新冠疫情前后的每月发病率:急性上呼吸道感染(AURI)、病毒性肝炎、疟疾、肺炎、腹泻、伤寒、麻疹和新生儿破伤风(NNT)。分析了巴基斯坦五个省/地区(2018 年 3 月至 2021 年 2 月)行政卫生数据中 3 年期间每月报告的这些疾病/综合征的病例。对每种传染病病原体或综合征以及新冠病毒的报告每月发病率进行时间序列可视化。计算了每种传染病/综合征与新冠病毒之间的斯皮尔曼等级相关系数,并使用 Wilcoxon 符号秩检验比较了新冠病毒前后每种疾病的中位数病例数。随后,建立了广义线性负二项回归模型,以确定报告的每种疾病病例与新冠病毒之间的关联。
2020 年 2 月下旬,与新冠病毒开始同时,在所有省份,AURI、肺炎、肝炎、腹泻、伤寒和麻疹的报告发病率均有所下降。相比之下,只有在旁遮普省和信德省,新冠病毒与 NNT 的报告发病率呈负相关,而在开伯尔-普赫图赫瓦省、俾路支省或自由克什米尔和吉尔吉特-巴尔蒂斯坦(AJK & GB)并不相关。同样,在旁遮普省、信德省和 AJK & GB,新冠病毒与疟疾的报告发病率下降相关,但在开伯尔-普赫图赫瓦省和俾路支省则不相关。
新冠病毒与巴基斯坦大多数省份研究的大多数传染病/综合征的报告发病率下降有关。然而,旁遮普省、俾路支省和 AJK & GB 的 NNT 以及开伯尔-普赫图赫瓦省和俾路支省的疟疾除外。这种总体趋势归因于资源转移、误诊、分类错误、错误信息和每种疾病的季节性模式的综合影响。