Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia

Dengue has now emerged as one of the major public health problems in Malaysia. It was first reported in 1901 in Penang and since then the disease has become endemic concentrating mostly in urban areas. This study used the temporal-spatial model to determine high risk areas for dengue outbreak by mea...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Che Dom, Nazri, Abd Latif, Zulkiflee, Ahmad, Abu Hassan, Ismail, Rodziah, Pradhan, Biswajeet
Format: Article
Published: Thai Society of Higher Education Institutes on Environment 2012
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/44354/
https://tshe.org/ea/ea_july2012.html
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.upm.eprints.44354
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.443542023-12-25T08:43:35Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/44354/ Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia Che Dom, Nazri Abd Latif, Zulkiflee Ahmad, Abu Hassan Ismail, Rodziah Pradhan, Biswajeet Dengue has now emerged as one of the major public health problems in Malaysia. It was first reported in 1901 in Penang and since then the disease has become endemic concentrating mostly in urban areas. This study used the temporal-spatial model to determine high risk areas for dengue outbreak by measuring three temporal risk characteristics (i.e. frequency, duration and intensity) in order to define the severity and magnitude of outbreak transmission. This study examined a total of 4,651 confirmed dengue fever cases, geo-coded by address in the city of Subang Jaya between January 2006 and December 2009. The values of the three indices were considered high in a spatial unit when their standard values were positive. Measurement of the three temporal risk indices found that there were areas with significant high value for each of the temporal indices. This suggested that areas within Subang Jaya Municipality had different temporal characteristics for dengue occurrence. The utilization of three risk measures enabled to identify higher-risk areas for the occurrence of dengue fever. Even though case notification data are subjected to bias, this information is available in the health services and can lead to important conclusions, recommendations and hypotheses. As a recommendation, the temporal risk indices can be utilized by public health officials to characterize dengue rather than relying on the traditional case incidence data. Thai Society of Higher Education Institutes on Environment 2012 Article PeerReviewed Che Dom, Nazri and Abd Latif, Zulkiflee and Ahmad, Abu Hassan and Ismail, Rodziah and Pradhan, Biswajeet (2012) Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia. EnvironmentAsia, 5 (2). pp. 82-92. ISSN 2586-8861 https://tshe.org/ea/ea_july2012.html 10.14456/ea.2012.22
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Dengue has now emerged as one of the major public health problems in Malaysia. It was first reported in 1901 in Penang and since then the disease has become endemic concentrating mostly in urban areas. This study used the temporal-spatial model to determine high risk areas for dengue outbreak by measuring three temporal risk characteristics (i.e. frequency, duration and intensity) in order to define the severity and magnitude of outbreak transmission. This study examined a total of 4,651 confirmed dengue fever cases, geo-coded by address in the city of Subang Jaya between January 2006 and December 2009. The values of the three indices were considered high in a spatial unit when their standard values were positive. Measurement of the three temporal risk indices found that there were areas with significant high value for each of the temporal indices. This suggested that areas within Subang Jaya Municipality had different temporal characteristics for dengue occurrence. The utilization of three risk measures enabled to identify higher-risk areas for the occurrence of dengue fever. Even though case notification data are subjected to bias, this information is available in the health services and can lead to important conclusions, recommendations and hypotheses. As a recommendation, the temporal risk indices can be utilized by public health officials to characterize dengue rather than relying on the traditional case incidence data.
format Article
author Che Dom, Nazri
Abd Latif, Zulkiflee
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Ismail, Rodziah
Pradhan, Biswajeet
spellingShingle Che Dom, Nazri
Abd Latif, Zulkiflee
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Ismail, Rodziah
Pradhan, Biswajeet
Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
author_facet Che Dom, Nazri
Abd Latif, Zulkiflee
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Ismail, Rodziah
Pradhan, Biswajeet
author_sort Che Dom, Nazri
title Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
title_short Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
title_full Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
title_fullStr Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Manifestation of GIS tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of Subang Jaya, Malaysia
title_sort manifestation of gis tools for spatial pattern distribution analysis of dengue fever epidemic in the city of subang jaya, malaysia
publisher Thai Society of Higher Education Institutes on Environment
publishDate 2012
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/44354/
https://tshe.org/ea/ea_july2012.html
_version_ 1787137199438823424
score 13.160551