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Coherence of dengue incidence and climate in the wet and dry zones of Sri Lanka

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 12:58 authored by Ranga PRABODANIE, Sergei Schreider, Bernard Cazelles, Lewi StoneLewi Stone
We studied the dynamics of dengue disease in two epidemic regions in Sri Lanka, the densely populated Colombo district representing the wet zone and the relatively less populated Batticaloa district representing the dry zone. Regional differences in disease dynamics were analysed against regional weather factors. Wavelets, Granger causality and regression methods were used. The difference between the dynamical features of these two regions may be explained by the differences in the climatic characteristics of the two regions. Wavelet analysis revealed that Colombo dengue incidence has 6 months periodicity while Batticaloa dengue incidence has 1 year periodicity. This is well explained by the dominant 6 months periodicity in Colombo rainfall and 1 year periodicity in Batticaloa rainfall. The association between dengue incidence and temperature was negative in dry Batticaloa and was insignificant in wet Colombo. Granger causality results indicated that rainfall, rainy days, relative humidity and wind speed can be used to predict Colombo dengue incidence while only rainfall and relative humidity were significant in Batticaloa. Negative binomial and linear regression models were used to identify the weather variables which best explain the variations in dengue incidence. Most recent available incidence data performed as best explanatory variables, outweighing the importance of past weather data. Therefore we recommend the health authorities to closely monitor the number of cases and to streamline recording procedures so that most recent data are available for early detection of epidemics. We also noted that epidemic responses to weather changes appear quickly in densely populated Colombo compared to less populated Batticaloa. The past dengue incidence and weather variables explain the dengue incidence better in Batticaloa than in Colombo and thus other exogenous factors such as population density and human mobility may be affecting Colombo dengue incidence.

History

Journal

Science of the Total Environment

Volume

724

Number

138269

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006099239

Esploro creation date

2020-09-08

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