Abstract

Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is a worldwide infectious disease, prominent in China. China’s HFMD data are sparse with a large number of observed zeros across locations and over time. However, no previous studies have considered such a zero-inflated problem on HFMD’s spatiotemporal risk analysis and mapping, not to mention for the entire Mainland China at county level. Monthly county-level HFMD cases data combined with related climate and socioeconomic variables were collected. We developed four models, including spatiotemporal Poisson, negative binomial, zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP), and zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) models under the Bayesian hierarchical modeling framework to explore disease spatiotemporal patterns. The results showed that the spatiotemporal ZINB model performed best. Both climate and socioeconomic variables were identified as significant risk factors for increasing HFMD incidence. The relative risk (RR) of HFMD at the local scale showed nonlinear temporal trends and was considerably spatially clustered in Mainland China. The first complete county-level spatiotemporal relative risk maps of HFMD were generated by this study. The new findings provide great potential for national county-level HFMD prevention and control, and the improved spatiotemporal zero-inflated model offers new insights for epidemic data with the zero-inflated problem in environmental epidemiology and public health.

Highlights

  • Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD), mainly occurring in young children, is a worldwide infectious disease caused by enterovirus and can lead to death [1]

  • We found that model 3 (Negative binomial) is better than model 1 (Poisson), and model 4 (ZINB) is better than model 2 (ZIP), which further indicates that models considering negative binomial distribution are better than traditional disease models that only consider Poisson distribution

  • We found that the main structured temporal relative risk (RR) trend of HFMD incidence in the whole study area

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Summary

Introduction

Foot, and mouth disease (HFMD), mainly occurring in young children, is a worldwide infectious disease caused by enterovirus and can lead to death [1]. The most obvious symptom of HFMD is that patients have small herpes or ulcers in positions of hand, foot, and mouth on the body. HFMD is mainly transmitted through air and close contact [1,2,3]. In China, HFMD is a leading infectious disease and has been formally incorporated into the national monitoring system, Int. J. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1476; doi:10.3390/ijerph15071476 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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