6533b837fe1ef96bd12a1f69

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Integration of animal health and public health surveillance sources to exhaustively inform the risk of zoonosis: An application to visceral leishmaniasis data in Brazil.

M Freire De CarvalhoR. BoazAndrew B. LawsonA. Corberán-valletR. Vieira AlvesJulio Cesar Augusto PompeiV. J. Del Rio VilasL. Edel DonatoGustavo MachadoF.e. De Ferreira Lima

subject

EpidemiologyHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis030231 tropical medicineGeography Planning and Development03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDogsSpatio-Temporal AnalysisPublic health surveillanceRisk FactorsEnvironmental healthZoonosesMedicineAnimalsHumansPublic Health Surveillance030212 general & internal medicineDog DiseasesDemographyHigh rateAnimal healthbusiness.industryZoonosisLeishmaniasismedicine.diseaseInfectious DiseasesVisceral leishmaniasisParasitic diseaseLeishmaniasis VisceralbusinessRisk classificationBrazil

description

Abstract Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a parasitic disease that is endemic in more than 80 countries, and leads to high fatality rates when left untreated. We investigate the relationship of VL cases in dogs and human cases, specifically for evidence of VL in dogs leading to excess cases in humans. We use surveillance data for dogs and humans for the years 2007–2011 to conduct both spatial and spatio-temporal analyses. Several models are evaluated incorporating varying levels of dependency between dog and human data. Models including dog data show marginal improvement over models without; however, for a subset of spatial units with ample data, models provide concordant risk classification for dogs and humans at high rates (∼70%). Limited reported dog case surveillance data may contribute to the results suggesting little explanatory value in the dog data, as excess human risk was only explained by dog risk in 5% of regions in the spatial analysis.

10.1016/j.sste.2018.09.001https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31128627