Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX3 7BN, UK.
Laboratório de Flavivírus, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, 21040-360, Brazil.
Sci Data. 2023 May 12;10(1):275. doi: 10.1038/s41597-023-02170-7.
Mosquito-borne viruses increasingly threaten human populations due to accelerating changes in climate, human and mosquito migration, and land use practices. Over the last three decades, the global distribution of dengue has rapidly expanded, causing detrimental health and economic problems in many areas of the world. To develop effective disease control measures and plan for future epidemics, there is an urgent need to map the current and future transmission potential of dengue across both endemic and emerging areas. Expanding and applying Index P, a previously developed mosquito-borne viral suitability measure, we map the global climate-driven transmission potential of dengue virus transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes from 1981 to 2019. This database of dengue transmission suitability maps and an R package for Index P estimations are offered to the public health community as resources towards the identification of past, current and future transmission hotspots. These resources and the studies they facilitate can contribute to the planning of disease control and prevention strategies, especially in areas where surveillance is unreliable or non-existent.
由于气候变化、人类和蚊子迁移以及土地利用方式的加速变化,蚊媒病毒日益威胁着人类种群。在过去的三十年中,登革热的全球分布迅速扩大,给世界许多地区带来了有害的健康和经济问题。为了制定有效的疾病控制措施并为未来的流行做计划,迫切需要对登革热在流行和新出现地区的当前和未来传播潜力进行绘图。我们扩展并应用了先前开发的蚊媒病毒适宜性指标 Index P,绘制了 1981 年至 2019 年由埃及伊蚊传播的登革热病毒的全球气候驱动的传播潜力图。将这些登革热传播适宜性地图数据库和用于 Index P 估计的 R 包提供给公共卫生界,作为识别过去、现在和未来传播热点的资源。这些资源和它们促成的研究可以为疾病控制和预防策略的规划做出贡献,特别是在监测不可靠或不存在的地区。