Abstract

BackgroundHand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common infectious disease whose mechanism of transmission continues to remain a puzzle for researchers. The measurement and prediction of the HFMD incidence can be combined to improve the estimation accuracy, and provide a novel perspective to explore the spatiotemporal patterns and determinant factors of an HFMD epidemic.MethodsIn this study, we collected weekly HFMD incidence reports for a total of 138 districts in Shandong province, China, from May 2008 to March 2009. A Kalman filter was integrated with geographically weighted regression (GWR) to estimate the HFMD incidence. Spatiotemporal variation characteristics were explored and potential risk regions were identified, along with quantitatively evaluating the influence of meteorological and socioeconomic factors on the HFMD incidence.ResultsThe results showed that the average error covariance of the estimated HFMD incidence by district was reduced from 0.3841 to 0.1846 compared to the measured incidence, indicating an overall improvement of over 50% in error reduction. Furthermore, three specific categories of potential risk regions of HFMD epidemics in Shandong were identified by the filter processing, with manifest filtering oscillations in the initial, local and long-term periods, respectively. Amongst meteorological and socioeconomic factors, the temperature and number of hospital beds per capita, respectively, were recognized as the dominant determinants that influence HFMD incidence variation.ConclusionsThe estimation accuracy of the HFMD incidence can be significantly improved by integrating a Kalman filter with GWR and the integration is effective for exploring spatiotemporal patterns and determinants of an HFMD epidemic. Our findings could help establish more accurate HFMD prevention and control strategies in Shandong. The present study demonstrates a novel approach to exploring spatiotemporal patterns and determinant factors of HFMD epidemics, and it can be easily extended to other regions and other infectious diseases similar to HFMD.

Highlights

  • Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common infectious disease whose mechanism of transmission continues to remain a puzzle for researchers

  • This study aims to estimate the spatiotemporal evolution of the HFMD incidence by districts using a Kalman filter integrated with geographically weighted regression (GWR), to explore the spatiotemporal variation characteristics and potential risk regions, and to quantitatively evaluate the influence of meteorological and socioeconomic factors on the HFMD variation

  • Kalman filtering validation The HFMD incidence rates of 138 monitored districts were obtained in 47 weeks

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Summary

Introduction

Foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common infectious disease whose mechanism of transmission continues to remain a puzzle for researchers. Foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common infectious disease caused by at least 20 enteroviruses including enterovirus 71 (EV-A71) and Coxsackie virus A16 (CA-V16) [1]. The transmission mechanism of HFMD epidemics is complicated and its spatiotemporal pattern is not yet fully understood [3]. In China, the first large-scale outbreaks of HFMD occurred in Linyi city, Shandong province in 2007 [7] and in Fuyang city, Anhui province in 2008 [8]. In May 2008 the Ministry of Health of China listed HFMD as a statutorily notifiable infectious category C disease. Numerous studies on HFMD epidemics were implemented in various regions, in provinces with serious epidemics, such as Guangdong [11, 12], Sichuan [13, 14], Henan [15, 16], Shandong [17, 18], and others

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