Regional-level risk factors for severe hand-foot-and-mouth disease: an ecological study from mainland China.

Environ Health Prev Med

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610041, PR China.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Severe hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFMD) poses significant health risks to young children, with enterovirus A71 being a known major cause, but other regional risk factors remain underexplored.
  • The study utilized clinical data from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention along with city-specific social, economic, and meteorological data to analyze the severity of HFMD across 143 Chinese cities from 2008 to 2014.
  • Results indicated a wide variation in HFMD severity rates, with higher rates in Central China, and identified that cities with better social and economic development and warm, humid climates tend to have lower severity rates of the disease.

Article Abstract

Background: Severe hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFMD) is a life-threatening contagious disease among young children and infants. Although enterovirus A71 has been well acknowledged to be the dominant cause of severe HFMD, there still remain other unidentified risk factors for severe HFMD. Previous studies mainly focused on identifying the individual-level risk factors from a clinical perspective, while rare studies aimed to clarify the association between regional-level risk factors and severe HFMD, which may be more important from a public health perspective.

Methods: We retrieved the clinical HFMD counts between 2008 and 2014 from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, which were used to calculated the case-severity rate in 143 prefectural-level cities in mainland China. For each of those 143 cities, we further obtained city-specific characteristics from the China City Statistical Yearbook (social and economic variables) and the national meteorological monitoring system (meteorological variables). A Poisson regression model was then used to estimate the associations between city-specific characteristics (reduced by the principal component analysis to avoid multicollinearity) and the case-severity rate of HFMD. The above analysis was further stratified by age and gender to examine potential modifying effects and vulnerable sub-populations.

Results: We found that the case-severity rate of HFMD varied dramatically between cities, ranging from 0 to 8.09%. Cities with high case-severity rates were mainly clustered in Central China. By relating the case-severity rate to city-specific characteristics, we found that both the principal component characterized by a high level of social and economic development (RR = 0.823, 95%CI 0.739, 0.916) and another that characterized by warm and humid climate (RR = 0.771, 95%CI 0.619, 0.960) were negatively associated with the case-severity rate of HFMD. These estimations were consistent across age and gender sub-populations.

Conclusion: Except for the type of infected pathogen, the case-severity rate of HFMD was closely related to city development and meteorological factor. These findings suggest that social and environmental factors may also play an important role in the progress of severe HFMD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7792012PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12199-020-00927-9DOI Listing

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