Journal ArticleOpen Access
Highly localized sensitivity to climate forcing drives endemic cholera in a megacity
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Michigan, National Institutes of Health, Fogarty International Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, ...
Published InProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year2012
Citations101
Abstract
The population dynamics of endemic cholera in urban environments--in particular interannual variation in the size and distribution of seasonal outbreaks--remain poorly understood and highly unpredictable. In part, this situation is due to the considerable demographic, socioeconomic, and environmental heterogeneity of large and growing urban centers. Despite this heterogeneity, the influence of climate variability on the population dynamics of infectious diseases is considered a large-scale, regional, phenomenon, and as such has been previously addressed for cholera only with temporal models that do not incorporate spatial structure. Here we show that a probabilistic spatial model can explain cholera dynamics in the megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh, and afford a basis for cholera forecasts at lead times of 11 mo. Critically, we find that…
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