Colston Josh M, Fang Bin, Nong Malena K, Chernyavskiy Pavel, Annapareddy Navya, Lakshmi Venkataraman, Kosek Margaret N
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and International Health, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States of America.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 Dec 18;4(12):e0003338. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003338. eCollection 2024.
Housing infrastructure and quality is a major determinant of infectious disease risk and other health outcomes in regions where vector borne, waterborne and neglected tropical diseases are endemic. It is important to quantify the geographical distribution of improvements to dwelling components to identify and target resources towards populations at risk. This study aimed to model the sub-national spatial variation in housing materials using covariates with quasi-global coverage and use the resulting estimates to map predicted coverage across the world's low- and middle-income countries. Data on materials used in dwelling construction were sourced from nationally representative household surveys conducted since 2005. Materials used for construction of flooring, walls, and roofs were reclassified as improved or unimproved. Households lacking location information were georeferenced using a novel methodology. Environmental and demographic spatial covariates were extracted at those locations for use as model predictors. Integrated nested Laplace approximation models were fitted to obtain, and map predicted probabilities for each dwelling component. The dataset compiled included information from households in 283,000 clusters from 350 surveys. Low coverage of improved housing was predicted across the Sahel and southern Sahara regions of Africa, much of inland Amazonia, and areas of the Tibetan plateau. Coverage of improved roofs and walls was high in the Central Asia, East Asia and Pacific and Latin America and the Caribbean regions. Improvements in all three components, but most notably floors, was low in Sub-Saharan Africa. The strongest determinants of dwelling component quality related to urbanization and economic development, suggesting that programs should focus on supply-side interventions, providing resources for housing improvements directly to the populations that need them. These findings are made available to researchers as files that can be imported into a GIS for integration into relevant analyses to derive improved estimates of preventable health burdens attributed to housing.
在媒介传播疾病、水源性疾病和被忽视的热带病流行的地区,住房基础设施和质量是传染病风险及其他健康结果的主要决定因素。量化住宅组件改善情况的地理分布,以识别有风险的人群并将资源投向这些人群,这一点很重要。本研究旨在使用具有准全球覆盖范围的协变量,对次国家层面住房材料的空间变化进行建模,并利用所得估计值绘制全球低收入和中等收入国家的预测覆盖率地图。用于住宅建设的材料数据来自2005年以来开展的具有全国代表性的家庭调查。用于地板、墙壁和屋顶建设的材料被重新分类为改良型或未改良型。缺乏位置信息的家庭使用一种新颖的方法进行地理定位。在这些位置提取环境和人口空间协变量,用作模型预测因子。拟合集成嵌套拉普拉斯近似模型,以获得并绘制每个住宅组件的预测概率。汇编的数据集包含来自350项调查中283,000个集群的家庭信息。预计非洲萨赫勒地区和撒哈拉以南地区、亚马逊内陆大部分地区以及青藏高原部分地区的改良住房覆盖率较低。中亚、东亚及太平洋地区以及拉丁美洲和加勒比地区的改良屋顶和墙壁覆盖率较高。撒哈拉以南非洲所有三个组件(但最显著的是地板)的改善程度都很低。住宅组件质量的最强决定因素与城市化和经济发展相关,这表明相关项目应侧重于供应侧干预措施,直接为有需求的人群提供住房改善资源。这些研究结果以文件形式提供给研究人员,可导入地理信息系统,以纳入相关分析,从而更准确地估计因住房问题导致的可预防健康负担。