Ngo Henry, Winder Charlotte, Ricker Nicole, Parmley E Jane, Murphy Heather M
Water, Health, and Applied Microbiology Lab (WHAM Lab), Department of Pathobiology, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
Department of Population Medicine, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
Can J Public Health. 2024 Dec 12. doi: 10.17269/s41997-024-00963-w.
The burden of acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) attributable to natural water recreation in Canada is unknown. Understanding the burden can help prioritize public health interventions and resource allocation for reduction of disease. Our objectives were to compile estimates of AGI burden associated with natural water recreation, identify knowledge gaps in water recreation epidemiology, and evaluate methods applicable for developing a burden estimate for Canada.
We conducted a scoping review of the literature. From a total of 2752 unique records identified, 35 met eligibility for inclusion. Articles were chosen if they examined burden in natural waterways, were written in English, and were based in countries of similar economic status to Canada in non-tropical regions. Burden was defined as either: incidence or prevalence, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), or economic cost.
Swimming or wading were the predominant forms of recreation examined (n = 32/35; 91.4%). Waterways studied were primarily marine or coastal beaches (n = 24/35; 68.6%) and were located within or adjacent to urban areas (n = 29/35; 82.9%). The most common indicator for burden was incidence or prevalence (n = 30/35; 85.7%). Prospective cohort studies (n = 17/35; 48.6%) and predictive modelling based on microorganism concentrations (n = 9/35; 25.7%) were the most common methods of estimation.
The review highlighted several knowledge gaps regarding recreational waterborne disease burden. Freshwater recreation, rural waterways, and recreational activities other than swimming and wading require further study. We propose that quantitative microbial risk assessment may be an appropriate, cost-effective method to estimate recreational waterborne disease burden in Canada.
加拿大自然水域休闲活动所致急性胃肠疾病(AGI)的负担尚不明确。了解这一负担有助于确定公共卫生干预措施和资源分配的优先次序,以减少疾病发生。我们的目标是汇总与自然水域休闲活动相关的AGI负担估计值,识别水域休闲活动流行病学方面的知识空白,并评估适用于制定加拿大负担估计值的方法。
我们对文献进行了范围综述。在总共识别出的2752条独特记录中,35条符合纳入标准。如果文章研究了天然水道中的负担情况、以英文撰写且基于非热带地区经济状况与加拿大相似的国家,则被选中。负担定义为以下任何一项:发病率或患病率、伤残调整生命年(DALY)、质量调整生命年(QALY)或经济成本。
游泳或涉水是所研究的主要休闲活动形式(n = 32/35;91.4%)。所研究的水道主要是海洋或沿海海滩(n = 24/35;68.6%),且位于城市地区内或附近(n = 29/35;82.9%)。最常见的负担指标是发病率或患病率(n = 30/35;85.7%)。前瞻性队列研究(n = 17/35;48.6%)和基于微生物浓度的预测模型(n = 9/35;25.7%)是最常见的估计方法。
该综述突出了关于休闲性水源性疾病负担的几个知识空白。淡水休闲活动、农村水道以及游泳和涉水以外的休闲活动需要进一步研究。我们建议,定量微生物风险评估可能是估计加拿大休闲性水源性疾病负担的一种合适且具有成本效益的方法。