• Title of article

    Weather as an effective predictor for occurrence of dengue fever in Taiwan

  • Author/Authors

    Pei-Chih Wu، نويسنده , , How-Ran Guo، نويسنده , , Shih-Chun Lung، نويسنده , , Chuan-Yao Lin، نويسنده , , Huey-Jen Su، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    50
  • To page
    57
  • Abstract
    We evaluated the impacts of weather variability on the occurrence of dengue fever in a major metropolitan city, Kaohsiung, in southern Taiwan using time-series analysis. Autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) models showed that the incidence of dengue fever was negatively associated with monthly temperature deviation (β = −0.126, p = 0.044), and a reverse association was also found with relative humidity (β = −0.025, p = 0.048). Both factors were observed to present their most prominent effects at a time lag of 2 months. Meanwhile, vector density record, a conventional approach often applied as a predictor for outbreak, did not appear to be a good one for diseases occurrence. Weather variability was identified as a meaningful and significant indicator for the increasing occurrence of dengue fever in this study, and it might be feasible to be adopted for predicting the influences of rising average temperature on the occurrence of infectious diseases of such kind at a city level. Further studies should take into account variations of socio-ecological changes and disease transmission patterns to better propose the increasing risk for infectious disease outbreak by applying the conveniently accumulated information of weather variability.
  • Keywords
    Dengue fever , weather , temperature , relative humidity , Aedes aegypti , Autoregressive integrated moving average models
  • Journal title
    Acta Tropica
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Acta Tropica
  • Record number

    778515