Abstract

BackgroundHand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) has circulated in China and caused yearly outbreak. To understand the transmission of the disease and to assess the spatial variation in cases reported, we examined age-specific transmission characteristics and reporting rates of HFMD for 31 provinces in mainland China.MethodsWe first analyzed incidence spatial patterns and age-specific incidence patterns using dataset from 2008 to 2012. Transmission characteristics were estimated based on catalytic model. Reporting rates were estimated using a simple mass action model from “Time Series Susceptible Infectious Recovered” (TSIR) modeling.ResultsWe found age-specific spatial incidence patterns: age-specific proportions of HFMD cases varied geographically in China; larger case percentage was among children of 3–5 years old in the northern part of China and was among children of 0–2 years old in the southern part of China. Our analysis results revealed that: 1) reporting rates and transmission characteristics including the average age at infection, the force of infection and the basic reproduction number varied geographically in China; 2) patterns of the age-specific force of infection for 30 provinces were similar to that of childhood infections in developed countries; the age group that had the highest infection risk was 3–5 years old in 30 provinces, and 10–14 years old in Tibet; 3) a large difference in HFMD transmission existed between northwest region and southeast region; 4) transmission characteristics determined incidence patterns: the higher the disease transmission in a province, the earlier the annual seasonality started and the more case percentage was among children 0–2 years old and less among 3–5 years old.ConclusionBecause HFMD has higher transmission than most childhood infections reported, high effective vaccine coverage is needed to substantially reduce HFMD incidence. Control measures before the vaccine implementation should focus on 2–6 years old children in 30 provinces and 10–14 years old children in Tibet.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12879-016-2008-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) has circulated in China and caused yearly outbreak

  • We aim to examine transmission characteristics of HFMD in China, including the force of infection, the average age at infection

  • Children of 3 to 5 years old had the highest force of HFMD infection in 30 provinces

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Summary

Introduction

Foot and mouth disease (HFMD) has circulated in China and caused yearly outbreak. To understand the transmission of the disease and to assess the spatial variation in cases reported, we examined age-specific transmission characteristics and reporting rates of HFMD for 31 provinces in mainland China. Foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a childhood infectious disease that mainly circulates in Asia-Pacific region, including Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand and China [1,2,3,4,5,6]. In China, the disease has spread into all provinces of the country and there have been annual HFMD outbreaks nationwide since 2008. Age related characteristics of major childhood diseases in developed countries have been well studied and documented by using pre-vaccination era data [17, 18]. Age-stratified incidence proportions of HFMD was reported [1], there has been no age-specific transmission characteristics reported up to now

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