>
Fa   |   Ar   |   En
   Challenges in developing methods for quantifying the effects of weather and climate on water-associated diseases: A systematic review  
   
نویسنده lo iacono g. ,armstrong b. ,fleming l.e. ,elson r. ,kovats s. ,vardoulakis s. ,nichols g.l.
منبع plos neglected tropical diseases - 2017 - دوره : 11 - شماره : 6
چکیده    Infectious diseases attributable to unsafe water supply,sanitation and hygiene (e.g. cholera,leptospirosis,giardiasis) remain an important cause of morbidity and mortality,especially in low-income countries. climate and weather factors are known to affect the transmission and distribution of infectious diseases and statistical and mathematical modelling are continuously developing to investigate the impact of weather and climate on water-associated diseases. there have been little critical analyses of the methodological approaches. our objective is to review and summarize statistical and modelling methods used to investigate the effects of weather and climate on infectious diseases associated with water,in order to identify limitations and knowledge gaps in developing of new methods. we conducted a systematic review of english-language papers published from 2000 to 2015. search terms included concepts related to water-associated diseases,weather and climate,statistical,epidemiological and modelling methods. we found 102 full text papers that met our criteria and were included in the analysis. the most commonly used methods were grouped in two clusters: process-based models (pbm) and time series and spatial epidemiology (ts-se). in general,pbm methods were employed when the bio-physical mechanism of the pathogen under study was relatively well known (e.g. vibrio cholerae); ts-se tended to be used when the specific environmental mechanisms were unclear (e.g. campylobacter). important data and methodological challenges emerged,with implications for surveillance and control of water-associated infections. the most common limitations comprised: non-inclusion of key factors (e.g. biological mechanism,demographic heterogeneity,human behavior),reporting bias,poor data quality,and collinearity in exposures. furthermore,the methods often did not distinguish among the multiple sources of time-lags (e.g. patient physiology,reporting bias,healthcare access) between environmental drivers/exposures and disease detection. key areas of future research include: disentangling the complex effects of weather/climate on each exposure-health outcome pathway (e.g. person-to-person vs environment-to-person),and linking weather data to individual cases longitudinally. © 2017 lo iacono et al.
آدرس chemical and environmental effects department,centre for radiation,chemical and environmental hazards,public health england,chilton, United Kingdom, department of social and environmental health research,london school of hygiene and tropical medicine,london, United Kingdom, european centre for environment and human health,university of exeter medical school,truro,cornwall, United Kingdom, gastrointestinal infections,national infection service,public health england,london, United Kingdom, department of social and environmental health research,london school of hygiene and tropical medicine,london, United Kingdom, chemical and environmental effects department,centre for radiation,chemical and environmental hazards,public health england,chilton,united kingdom,department of social and environmental health research,london school of hygiene and tropical medicine,london,united kingdom,european centre for environment and human health,university of exeter medical school,truro,cornwall,united kingdom,institute of occupational medicine,edinburgh, United Kingdom, european centre for environment and human health,university of exeter medical school,truro,cornwall,united kingdom,gastrointestinal infections,national infection service,public health england,london,united kingdom,university of east anglia,norwich,united kingdom,university of thessaly,larissa,thessaly, Greece
 
     
   
Authors
  
 
 

Copyright 2023
Islamic World Science Citation Center
All Rights Reserved