Abstract

Background: The incidence of other infectious diarrhea (OID) ranked second in class C notifiable disease in China. It has posed a great threat to public health of all age groups. The aim of this study was to investigate the epidemiological trends and hotspots of OID in mainland China.Materials and Methods: Incidence and mortality data for OID stratified by date, age and region from 2004 to 2017 was extracted from the data-center of China public health science. Joinpoint regression and space-time analyses were performed to explore the epidemiological trends and hotspots of OID.Results: The average annual incidence of OID was 60.64/100,000 and it showed an increased trend in the mainland China especially after 2006 (APC = 4.12, 95 CI%: 2.06–6.21). Children of 0–4 year age group accounts for 60.00% (5,820,897/11,414,247) of all cases and its incidence continuously increased though 2004–2017 (APC = 6.65, 95 CI%: 4.39–8.96). The first-level spatial and temporal aggregation areas were located in Beijing and Tianjin, with the gathering time from 2005/1/1 to 2011/12/31 (RR = 5.52, LLR = 572893.59, P < 0.001). The secondary spatial and temporal aggregation areas covered Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan and Guizhou from 2011/1/1 to 2017/12/31 (RR = 1.98, LLR = 242292.72, P < 0.001). OID of Tianjin and Beijing presented a decreased trend since 2006. However, the incidence of OID in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan and Guizhou showed increased trends through 2004–2017.Conclusion: Our study showed that OID showed a constantly increasing trend and brought considerable burden in China especially in the 0–4 age group. The high-risk periods and clusters of regions for OID were identified, which will help government develop disease-specific and location-specific interventive measures.

Highlights

  • Infectious diarrhea is one of the most common infectious diseases around the world and acts as an important indicator to regional hygiene, food safety and public health [1]

  • To assess the epidemiological trends and hotspots of other infectious diarrhea (OID) in mainland China, the data of OID including the number of cases and deaths, the incidence and mortality were stratified by date, age and region

  • The results of Joinpoint analysis showed that the incidence of 0–4 age group continuously increased through 2004–2017 (APC = 6.65, 95CI%: 4.39–8.96, P < 0.05) (Figure 2B)

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious diarrhea is one of the most common infectious diseases around the world and acts as an important indicator to regional hygiene, food safety and public health [1]. In 2010, the diarrhoeal disease ranked second in the global burden of infectious diseases and in 2015, about 2.3 billion people had experienced diarrhea worldwide [2]. It was a major cause of malnutrition and mortality among children under 5 in developing countries [3]. It has posed a great threat to public health of all age groups, especially to infants and young children, which caused a heavy economic burden in China. The incidence of other infectious diarrhea (OID) ranked second in class C notifiable disease in China.

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