Abstract

During a 6-week period in November and December 2015, a series of Atlantic Storms swept across the Republic of Ireland (ROI) causing widespread pluvial and fluvial flooding. Flooding was particularly severe in the west and midlands, with rainfall up to 200% above normal in many regions, making it the wettest winter ever recorded. While the infrastructural damage and subsequent costs associated with flood events have, and continue to receive widespread attention, far less coverage is given to the associated adverse human health effects. This is particularly significant in the ROI, which is characterised by the highest crude incidence rates of verotoxigenic E. coli (VTEC) enteritis and cryptosporidiosis in Europe. Accordingly, weekly spatially-referenced infection incidence from July 2015 to June 2016 were employed in concurrence with weekly time-series of cumulative antecedent rainfall, surface water discharge and groundwater level, and high-resolution flood risk mapping. An ensemble of statistical and time-series analyses were used to quantify the influence of flood hydrometeorology on the incidence of confirmed infections. Seasonal decomposition (excluding seasonal patterns and long-term trends) identified a high residual infection peak during April 2016, with space-timing scanning used to identify the location, size and temporal extent of clustering. Excess cases of VTEC enteritis were geographically associated with the midlands, while cryptosporidiosis clusters were widespread. Generalised linear modelling of infection locations show that areas with a surface water body exhibited significantly higher incidence rates for both VTEC (OR: 1.225; p < 0.001) and cryptosporidiosis (OR: 1.363; p < 0.001). ARIMA models show a clear association between rainfall, surface water discharge, groundwater levels and infection incidence, with lagged associations from 16 to 20 weeks particularly strong, thus indicating a link between infection peaks (April 2016) and the flood event which began approximately 18 weeks earlier. All three hydrometeorological variables were associated with the increase in cryptosporidiosis during April 2016, while only surface water discharge was associated with VTEC enteritis. Study findings may be employed for improved risk communication, risk management and surveillance to safeguard public health after large hydrometeorological events.

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