Two Clustering Diffusion Patterns Identified from the 2001–2003 Dengue Epidemic, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Resource
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 79 (3): 344-352
Journal
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Journal Volume
79
Journal Issue
3
Pages
344-352
Date Issued
2008
Date
2008
Author(s)
Kan C.-C
Wen T.-H
Chao D.-Y
Wu M.-H
Lin N.H
Huang S.Y.-J
Shang C.-S
Fan I.-C
Shu P.-Y
Huang J.-H
King C.-C
Pai L.
Abstract
This study analyzed the spatio-temporal patterns of 4,587 (94% of the total) confirmed dengue cases in Kaohsiung and Fengshan Cities (a two-city area) that occurred in Taiwan from 2001 to 2003. The epidemic had two simultaneous distinct diffusion patterns. One was a contiguous pattern, mostly limited to 1 km from an initial cluster, reflecting that there was a rapid dispersal of infected Aedes aegypti and viremic persons. The second followed a relocation pattern, involving clusters of cases that diffused over 10 weeks starting from the southern and moving to the northern parts of the two-city area. The virus from one clustering site jumped to several distant areas where it rapidly dispersed through a series of human-mosquito transmission cycles to several localities. In both patterns, transmission of disease quickly enlarged the epidemic areas. Future dengue control efforts would benefit from a timely syndromic surveillance system plus extensive public education on how to avoid further transmission. Copyright © 2008 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
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Type
journal article
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