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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Use of a geographic information system for defining spatial risk for dengue transmission in Bangladesh: Role for Aedes albopictus in an urban outbreak

Author Affiliations
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Published InUNC Libraries
Year2020
Citations19

Abstract

We used conventional and spatial analytical tools to characterize patterns of transmission during a community-wide outbreak of dengue fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 2000. A comprehensive household-level mosquito vector survey and interview was conducted to obtain data on mosquito species and breeding as well as illness consistent with dengue. Clusters of dengue illnesses and high-density vector populations were observed in a distinct sector of the city. Dengue clusters are less identifiable in areas further away from major hospitals, suggesting that proximity to hospitals determines whether cases of dengue are diagnosed. Focusing on those areas relatively close to hospitals, we found a spatial association between dengue clusters and vector populations. Households reporting a recent dengue illness were…
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