Following the large epidemic of Japanese encephalitis which occurred in northern Thailand in 1969, a one year epidemiologic study of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) transmission was instituted in the centrally located Chiangmai Valley. The Valley has a subtropical climate and is situated geographically between the two major zones of JEV transmission: epidemic transmission in countries with temperate climates and endemic transmission in countries with tropical climates. The presence of concurrent human dengue virus transmission in the Chiangmai Valley, a unique situation in an epidemic JE area, provided further impetus to study this region. In order to investigate human and nonhuman variables of JEV transmission and, at the same time, determine what effect the presence or absence of historical dengue transmission has on JEV transmission, four scattered rural villages in the Valley and one urban school were selected for study. Samples of humans, domestic and wild animals, and mosquitoes were studied, with appropriate methods, from November 1969 to November 1970. Encephalitis case ascertainment was established at the major Valley hospitals. Data from the randomly selected village human samples suggest that they are representative of the Valley's population. It is therefore believed that inferences may be drawn about the epidemiology of JEV which are valid for the entire Chiangmai Valley.
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