Abstract
Echinococcosis, which can seriously harm human health and animal husbandry production, has become an endemic in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China. In order to explore an effective human Echinococcosis forecasting model in Xinjiang, three grey models, namely, the traditional grey GM(1,1) model, the Grey-Periodic Extensional Combinatorial Model (PECGM(1,1)), and the Modified Grey Model using Fourier Series (FGM(1,1)), in addition to a multiplicative seasonal ARIMA(1,0,1)(1,1,0)4 model, are applied in this study for short-term predictions. The accuracy of the different grey models is also investigated. The simulation results show that the FGM(1,1) model has a higher performance ability, not only for model fitting, but also for forecasting. Furthermore, considering the stability and the modeling precision in the long run, a dynamic epidemic prediction model based on the transmission mechanism of Echinococcosis is also established for long-term predictions. Results demonstrate that the dynamic epidemic prediction model is capable of identifying the future tendency. The number of human Echinococcosis cases will increase steadily over the next 25 years, reaching a peak of about 1250 cases, before eventually witnessing a slow decline, until it finally ends.
Highlights
Echinococcosis is a globally distributed parasitic infection of humans and livestock
We expect that this will significantly reduce the incidence of Echinococcosis infection in Xinjiang
Has the greatest impact on R0, followed by the livestock to dog transmission rate β 1 (|production correlation number R0 . (PRCC)| = 0.8916), and the high rate moving from infected to non-infected dogs σ (|PRCC| = −0.8307)
Summary
Echinococcosis is a globally distributed parasitic infection of humans and livestock. It can threaten human health and seriously hinder the development of animal husbandry. Between 2004 and 2010, a total of 4768 human Echinococcosis cases were reported in Xinjiang, accounting for 32.55% of the total number of cases in China [1]. The large number of published reports on various aspects of Echinococcosis in Xinjiang clearly suggests that the disease is of major public health concern. Infection with Echinococcus remains a major public health issue, and it is regarded as one of the most serious endemic diseases in Xinjiang
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