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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Rotavirus infections and climate variability in Dhaka, Bangladesh: a time-series analysis

Author Affiliations
Nagasaki Institute of Applied Science, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University, University of Tsukuba, ...
Published InEpidemiology and Infection
Year2007
Citations139

Abstract

Attempts to explain the clear seasonality of rotavirus infections have been made by relating disease incidence to climate factors; however, few studies have disentangled the effects of weather from other factors that might cause seasonality. We investigated the relationships between hospital visits for rotavirus diarrhoea and temperature, humidity and river level, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, using time-series analysis adjusting for other confounding seasonal factors. There was strong evidence for an increase in rotavirus diarrhoea at high temperatures, by 40.2% for each 1 degrees C increase above a threshold (29 degrees C). Relative humidity had a linear inverse relationship with the number of cases of rotavirus diarrhoea. River level, above a threshold (4.8 m), was associated with an increase in cases of…
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