登革热
卫生
地理
背景(考古学)
社会经济地位
气候变化
社会经济学
环境卫生
生态学
环境科学
人口
生物
环境工程
经济
医学
考古
免疫学
作者
Rory Gibb,Felipe J. Colón‐González,Phan Trong Lan,Phan Thị Mai Hương,Vũ Sinh Nam,Vũ Trọng Dược,Hung Thai,Nguyễn Thành Đồng,Vien Chinh Chien,Luu Trang,Do Kien Quoc,Tran Minh Hoa,Nguyen Hữu Tai,Trần Thị Thúy Hằng,Gina Tsarouchi,Eleanor Ainscoe,Quillon Harpham,Barbara Hofmann,Darren Lumbroso,Oliver J. Brady,Rachel Lowe
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-43954-0
摘要
Abstract Dengue is expanding globally, but how dengue emergence is shaped locally by interactions between climatic and socio-environmental factors is not well understood. Here, we investigate the drivers of dengue incidence and emergence in Vietnam, through analysing 23 years of district-level case data spanning a period of significant socioeconomic change (1998-2020). We show that urban infrastructure factors (sanitation, water supply, long-term urban growth) predict local spatial patterns of dengue incidence, while human mobility is a more influential driver in subtropical northern regions than the endemic south. Temperature is the dominant factor shaping dengue’s distribution and dynamics, and using long-term reanalysis temperature data we show that warming since 1950 has expanded transmission risk throughout Vietnam, and most strongly in current dengue emergence hotspots (e.g., southern central regions, Ha Noi). In contrast, effects of hydrometeorology are complex, multi-scalar and dependent on local context: risk increases under either short-term precipitation excess or long-term drought, but improvements in water supply mitigate drought-associated risks except under extreme conditions. Our findings challenge the assumption that dengue is an urban disease, instead suggesting that incidence peaks in transitional landscapes with intermediate infrastructure provision, and provide evidence that interactions between recent climate change and mobility are contributing to dengue’s expansion throughout Vietnam.
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