Abstract

Dengue fever (DF) is one of the most common and rapidly spreading mosquito-borne viral diseases in tropical and subtropical regions. In recent years, this imported disease has posed a serious threat to public health in China, especially in the Pearl River Delta (PRD). Although the severity of DF outbreaks in the PRD is generally associated with known risk factors, fine scale assessments of areas at high risk for DF outbreaks are limited. We built five ecological niche models to identify such areas including a variety of climatic, environmental, and socioeconomic variables, as well as, in some models, extracted principal components. All the models we tested accurately identified the risk of DF, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) were greater than 0.8, but the model using all original variables was the most accurate (AUC = 0.906). Socioeconomic variables had a greater impact on this model (total contribution 55.27%) than climatic and environmental variables (total contribution 44.93%). We found the highest risk of DF outbreaks on the border of Guangzhou and Foshan (in the central PRD), and in northern Zhongshan (in the southern PRD). Our fine-scale results may help health agencies to focus epidemic monitoring tightly on the areas at highest risk of DF outbreaks.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDengue fever (DF) is an insect-borne disease caused by four different dengue viruses

  • Dengue fever (DF) is an insect-borne disease caused by four different dengue viruses (DENV1–4), which are mainly transmitted by Ae. aegypti and Ae

  • We examined a variety of predictive variables that affect potential risk of a DF epidemic

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Summary

Introduction

Dengue fever (DF) is an insect-borne disease caused by four different dengue viruses 1–4), which are mainly transmitted by Ae. aegypti and Ae. Albopictus [1]. DF is endemic to more than 100 countries in tropical and subtropical areas, especially in Southeast Asia, the Americas, the Western. Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean [2]. The overall incidence of DF has increased 30-fold in the past 50 years, with about 2.5 billion people living in DF-endemic risk areas [2]. There were no documented cases of DF in China after 1949 until an outbreak in Guangdong. Province in 1978 [1]. DF in Mainland China continues to be seen as an imported infection, Int. J. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 619; doi:10.3390/ijerph14060619 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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