Publications by authors named "Jose Quintin Cuador-Gil"

Article Synopsis
  • * The study used factors like climate, topography, livestock populations, and bat distribution to assess rabies risk in Mexico, revealing that areas like Yucatán and Chiapas have the highest risk.
  • * Key factors influencing rabies risk include topography, vampire bat distribution, and rural livestock populations, providing helpful data for public health officials to prevent rabies spread in non-infected regions.
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Spatial epidemiology of bat-transmitted rabies in cattle has been limited to spatial distribution of cases, an approach that does not identify hidden patterns and the spread resulting in outbreaks in endemic and susceptible areas. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between the three variables average annual maximum, annual minimum temperature and precipitation in the region on the one hand, and the spatial distribution of cases on the other, using geographic information systems and co-Kriging considering that these environmental variables condition the existence of the rabies vector Desmodus rotundus. A stationary behaviour between the primary and the secondary variables was verified by basic statistics and moving window statistics.

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The purpose of this study was to use geographic information systems (GIS) and geo-statistical methods of ordinary kriging to predict the prevalence and distribution of bovine tuberculosis (TB) in Jalisco, Mexico. A random sample of 2 287 herds selected from a set of 48 766 was used for the analysis. Spatial location of herds was obtained by either a personal global positioning system (GPS), a database from the Instituto Nacional de Estadìstica Geografìa e Informàtica (INEGI) or Google Earth.

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