Abstract

Previous studies have explored the effect between ambient temperature and infectious diarrhea (ID) mostly using relative risk, which provides limited information in practical applications. Few studies have focused on the disease burden of ID caused by temperature, especially for different subgroups and cities in a multi-city setting. This study aims to estimate the effects and attributable risks of temperature on category C ID and explore potential modifiers among various cities in Guangdong. First, distributed lag non-linear models (DLNMs) were used to explore city-specific associations between daily mean temperature and category C ID from 2014 to 2016 in Guangdong and pooled by applying multivariate meta-analysis. Then, multivariate meta-regression was implemented to analyze the potential heterogeneity among various cities. Finally, we assessed the attributable burden of category C ID due to temperature, low (below the 5th percentile of temperature) and high temperature (above the 95th percentile of temperature) for each city and subgroup population. Compared with the 50th percentile of daily mean temperature, adverse effects on category C ID were found when the temperature was lower than 12.27 ℃ in Guangdong Province. Some city-specific factors (longitude, urbanization rate, population density, disposable income per capita, and the number of medical technicians and beds per thousand persons) could modify the relationship of temperature-category C ID. During the study period, there were 60,505 category C ID cases (17.14% of total cases) attributable to the exposure of temperature, with the attributable fraction (AF) of low temperature (4.23%, 95% empirical confidence interval (eCI): 1.79-5.71%) higher than high temperature (1.34%, 95% eCI: 0.86-1.64%). Males, people under 5years, and workers appeared to be more vulnerable to temperature, with AFs of 29.40%, 19.25%, and 21.49%, respectively. The AF varied substantially at the city level, with the largest AF of low temperature occurring in Shaoguan (9.58%, 95% eCI: 8.36-10.09%), and that of high temperature occurring in Shenzhen (3.16%, 95% eCI: 2.70-3.51%). Low temperature was an important risk factor for category C ID in Guangdong Province, China. The exposure-response relationship could be modified by city-specific characteristics. Considering the whole population, the attributable risk of low temperature was much higher than that of high temperature, and males, people under 5years, and workers were vulnerable populations.

Highlights

  • Infectious diarrhea (ID) is a group of intestinal infectious diseases caused by various pathogenic microorganisms and their products, with diarrhea as the main symptom (Kelly 2019)

  • The attributable fraction (AF) varied substantially at the city level, with the largest AF of low temperature occurred in Shaoguan (9.58%, 95%empirical confidence interval (eCI): 8.36%-10.09%), and that of high temperature occurred in Shenzhen (3.16%, 95%eCI: 2.70%-3.51%)

  • We found that viral diarrhea accounted for 91.64% of all biology-tested other infectious diarrhea (OID) cases according to the reported data of Guangdong from 2014 to 2016

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious diarrhea (ID) is a group of intestinal infectious diseases caused by various pathogenic microorganisms (including bacteria, viruses, and parasites) and their products, with diarrhea as the main symptom (Kelly 2019). It remains a severe public health issue, with an estimated 1.7 billion morbidities and 1.4–1.9 million diarrhea-related deaths annually in the world (Leung et al 2016, Levy et al 2016). According to the Announcement of Infectious Diseases of the Chinese Public Health Science Data Center (https://www.phsciencedata.cn/), the number of OID cases in Guangdong ranks first from 2009 to 2016 and continues to rise rapidly

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