Abstract

BackgroundThailand is home to around 69 million individuals. Dengue is hyper-endemic and all 4 serotypes are in active circulation in the country. Dengue outbreaks occur almost annually within Thailand in at least one province but the spatio-temporal and environmental interface of these outbreaks has not been studied.MethodsWe develop Bayesian regime switching (BRS) models to characterize outbreaks, their persistence and infer their likelihood of occurrence across time for each administrative province where dengue case counts are collected. BRS was compared against two other classification tools and their agreement is assessed. We further examine how these spatio-temporal clusters of outbreak clusters arise by comparing reported dengue case counts, urban population, urban land cover, climate and flight volumes on the province level.ResultsTwo dynamic dengue epidemic clusters were found nationally. One cluster consists of 47 provinces and is highly outbreak prone. Provinces with a large number of case counts, urban population, urban land cover and incoming flight passengers are associated to the epidemic prone cluster of dengue. Climate has an effect on determining the probability of outbreaks over time within provinces, but have less influence on whether provinces belong to the epidemic prone cluster. BRS found high agreement with other classification tools.ConclusionsImportation and urbanization drives the risk of outbreaks across regions strongly. In provinces estimated to have high epidemic persistence, more resource allocation to vector control should be applied to those localities as heightened transmission counts are likely to occur over a longer period of time. Clustering of epidemic and non-epidemic prone areas also highlights the need for prioritization of resource allocation for disease mitigation over provinces in Thailand.

Highlights

  • Thailand is home to around 69 million individuals

  • Cluster analysis indicates that cluster 1 (C1) consists of 29 provinces compared to cluster 2 (C2), which has 47

  • The outbreak prone C2 is concentrated around the Northern region of Thailand, while the less outbreak prone C1 dispersed around the central and southern regions of Thailand (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Dengue is hyper-endemic and all 4 serotypes are in active circulation in the country. Thailand is home to around 69 million individuals [1], with dengue considered to be hyper-endemic due to all four serotypes being in active circulation within the country. The identification of high risk, epidemic prone areas with frequent outbreaks would help allocate resources to these zones to reduce the public health burdens of dengue – which is especially important for countries which are vast, such as Thailand. Considerable work has been conducted to understand the temporal behaviour of dengue in Thailand, ranging from peri-urban settings [4, 5], provincial level studies analyzing province specific trends [6,7,8] as well as national level transmission patterns [3, 9,10,11,12,13]. A substantial number of studies focus on understanding predicting dengue incidence in Thailand [14,15,16]

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