AI Article Synopsis

  • Lyme disease is increasingly becoming a public health issue in Québec, mainly due to environmental and human factors that support the ticks responsible for transmission.
  • Researchers aimed to track the speed and direction of Lyme disease's spread in Québec and identify high-risk areas.
  • Findings revealed that Lyme disease is moving north at 18 to 32 km/year, with significant risk clusters located in south-western Québec, aiding health authorities in creating targeted interventions.

Article Abstract

Lyme disease is a growing public health problem in Québec. Its emergence over the last decade is caused by environmental and anthropological factors that favour the survival of , the vector of Lyme disease transmission. The objective of this study was to estimate the speed and direction of human Lyme disease emergence in Québec and to identify spatiotemporal risk patterns. A surface trend analysis was conducted to estimate the speed and direction of its emergence based upon the first detected case of Lyme disease in each municipality in Québec since 2004. A cluster analysis was also conducted to identify at-risk regions across space and time. These analyses were reproduced for the date of disease onset and date of notification for each case of Lyme disease. It was estimated that Lyme disease is spreading northward in Québec at a speed varying between 18 and 32 km/year according to the date of notification and the date of disease onset, respectively. A significantly high risk of disease was found in seven clusters identified in the south-west of Québec in the sociosanitary regions of Montérégie and Estrie. The results obtained in this study improve our understanding of the spatiotemporal patterns of Lyme disease in Québec, which can be used for proactive, targeted interventions by public and clinical health authorities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8470240PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189669DOI Listing

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