Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia

A large scale study was conducted to elucidate the true relationship among entomological, epidemiological and environmental factors that contributed to dengue outbreak in Malaysia. Two large areas (Selayang and Bandar Baru Bangi) were selected in this study based on five consecutive years of high de...

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Main Authors: Ahmad, Rohani, Ismail, Suzilah, Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali, Topek, Omar, Mustafakamal, Ibrahim, Han Lim, Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Plos 2018
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Online Access:https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/1/PO%2013%2002%202018%2001-13.pdf
https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0193326
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spelling my.uum.repo.309772024-07-04T03:20:02Z https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/ Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia Ahmad, Rohani Ismail, Suzilah Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali Topek, Omar Mustafakamal, Ibrahim Han Lim, Lee QA Mathematics A large scale study was conducted to elucidate the true relationship among entomological, epidemiological and environmental factors that contributed to dengue outbreak in Malaysia. Two large areas (Selayang and Bandar Baru Bangi) were selected in this study based on five consecutive years of high dengue cases. Entomological data were collected using ovitraps where the number of larvae was used to reflect Aedes mosquito population size; followed by RT-PCR screening to detect and serotype dengue virus in mosquitoes. Notified cases, date of disease onset, and number and type of the interventions were used as epidemiological endpoint, while rainfall, temperature, relative humidity and air pollution index (API) were indicators for environmental data. The field study was conducted during 81 weeks of data collection. Correlation and Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model were used to determine the relationship. The study showed that, notified cases were indirectly related with the environmental data, but shifted one week, i.e. last 3 weeks positive PCR; last 4 weeks rainfall; last 3 weeks maximum relative humidity; last 3 weeks minimum and maximum temperature; and last 4 weeks air pollution index (API), respectively. Notified cases were also related with next week intervention, while conventional intervention only happened 4 weeks after larvae were found, indicating ample time for dengue transmission. Based on a significant relationship among the three factors (epidemiological, entomological and environmental), estimated Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ADL) model for both locations produced high accuracy 84.9% for Selayang and 84.1% for Bandar Baru Bangi in predicting the actual notified cases. Hence, such model can be used in forestalling dengue outbreak and acts as an early warning system. The existence of relationships among the entomological, epidemiological and environmental factors can be used to build an early warning system for the prediction of dengue outbreak so that preventive interventions can be taken early to avert the outbreaks Plos 2018 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/1/PO%2013%2002%202018%2001-13.pdf Ahmad, Rohani and Ismail, Suzilah and Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali and Topek, Omar and Mustafakamal, Ibrahim and Han Lim, Lee (2018) Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia. PLoS ONE, 13 (2). pp. 1-13. ISSN 1932-6203 https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0193326
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic QA Mathematics
spellingShingle QA Mathematics
Ahmad, Rohani
Ismail, Suzilah
Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali
Topek, Omar
Mustafakamal, Ibrahim
Han Lim, Lee
Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
description A large scale study was conducted to elucidate the true relationship among entomological, epidemiological and environmental factors that contributed to dengue outbreak in Malaysia. Two large areas (Selayang and Bandar Baru Bangi) were selected in this study based on five consecutive years of high dengue cases. Entomological data were collected using ovitraps where the number of larvae was used to reflect Aedes mosquito population size; followed by RT-PCR screening to detect and serotype dengue virus in mosquitoes. Notified cases, date of disease onset, and number and type of the interventions were used as epidemiological endpoint, while rainfall, temperature, relative humidity and air pollution index (API) were indicators for environmental data. The field study was conducted during 81 weeks of data collection. Correlation and Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model were used to determine the relationship. The study showed that, notified cases were indirectly related with the environmental data, but shifted one week, i.e. last 3 weeks positive PCR; last 4 weeks rainfall; last 3 weeks maximum relative humidity; last 3 weeks minimum and maximum temperature; and last 4 weeks air pollution index (API), respectively. Notified cases were also related with next week intervention, while conventional intervention only happened 4 weeks after larvae were found, indicating ample time for dengue transmission. Based on a significant relationship among the three factors (epidemiological, entomological and environmental), estimated Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ADL) model for both locations produced high accuracy 84.9% for Selayang and 84.1% for Bandar Baru Bangi in predicting the actual notified cases. Hence, such model can be used in forestalling dengue outbreak and acts as an early warning system. The existence of relationships among the entomological, epidemiological and environmental factors can be used to build an early warning system for the prediction of dengue outbreak so that preventive interventions can be taken early to avert the outbreaks
format Article
author Ahmad, Rohani
Ismail, Suzilah
Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali
Topek, Omar
Mustafakamal, Ibrahim
Han Lim, Lee
author_facet Ahmad, Rohani
Ismail, Suzilah
Wan Najdah, Wan Mohamad Ali
Topek, Omar
Mustafakamal, Ibrahim
Han Lim, Lee
author_sort Ahmad, Rohani
title Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
title_short Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
title_full Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
title_fullStr Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Factors determining dengue outbreak in Malaysia
title_sort factors determining dengue outbreak in malaysia
publisher Plos
publishDate 2018
url https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/1/PO%2013%2002%202018%2001-13.pdf
https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/30977/
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0193326
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score 13.160551