Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding the association between floods and bacillary dysentery (BD) incidence is necessary for us to assess the health risk of extreme weather events. This study aims at exploring the association between floods and daily bacillary dysentery cases in main urban areas of Chongqing between 2005 and 2016 as well as evaluating the attributable risk from floods.MethodsThe association between floods and daily bacillary dysentery cases was evaluated by using distributed lag non-linear model, controlling for meteorological factors, long-term trend, seasonality, and day of week. The fraction and number of bacillary dysentery cases attributable to floods was calculated. Subgroup analyses were conducted to explore the association across age, gender, and occupation.ResultsAfter controlling the impact of temperature, precipitation, relative humidity, long-term trend, and seasonality, a significant lag effect of floods on bacillary dysentery cases was found at 0-day, 3-day, and 4-day lag, and the cumulative relative risk (CRR) over a 7-lag day period was 1.393 (95%CI 1.216–1.596). Male had higher risk than female. People under 5 years old and people aged 15–64 years old had significantly higher risk. Students, workers, and children had significantly higher risk. During the study period, based on 7-lag days, the attributable fraction of bacillary dysentery cases due to floods was 1.10% and the attributable number was 497 persons.ConclusionsThis study confirms that floods can increase the risk of bacillary dysentery incidence in main urban areas of Chongqing within an accurate time scale, the risk of bacillary dysentery caused by floods is still serious. The key population includes male, people under 5 years old, students, workers, and children. Considering the lag effect of floods on bacillary dysentery, the government and public health emergency departments should advance to the emergency health response in order to minimize the potential risk of floods on public.

Highlights

  • A series of extreme weather events caused by global climate change have posed a significant threat to public health

  • This study found the association between floods and daily bacillary dysentery cases in main urban area of Chongqing, China

  • Considering the short incubation period and acute onset of bacillary dysentery, daily case instead of weekly or monthly case was used to quantify the correlation between floods and incidence of bacillary dysentery, which could result in higher precision and accuracy of evaluation [13,14,15,16]

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Summary

Introduction

A series of extreme weather events caused by global climate change have posed a significant threat to public health. Floods are the most common and frequent extreme weather events. Floods, as well as other social environmental factors, have an impact on public health involving fecaloral transmitted infectious diseases, mesoporous infectious diseases, and insect-borne diseases [2, 3]. Bacillary dysentery is one of the intestinal infectious diseases caused by Shigella. According to a report of Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, bacillary dysentery ranked third in the reported incidence of notifiable infectious diseases in China, and there were 250,000 to 500,000 reported cases per year between 2005 and 2010 [5]. Understanding the association between floods and bacillary dysentery (BD) incidence is necessary for us to assess the health risk of extreme weather events. This study aims at exploring the association between floods and daily bacillary dysentery cases in main urban areas of Chongqing between 2005 and 2016 as well as evaluating the attributable risk from floods

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