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Analysis of Meteorological Effects on the Incidence of Tick-borne Encephalitis in the Czech Republic over a Thirty-year Period

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    SYSNO ASEP0473776
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JOstatní články
    TitleAnalysis of Meteorological Effects on the Incidence of Tick-borne Encephalitis in the Czech Republic over a Thirty-year Period
    Author(s) Brabec, Marek (UIVT-O) RID, SAI, ORCID
    Daniel, M. (CZ)
    Malý, Marek (UIVT-O) RID, SAI
    Danielová, V. (CZ)
    Kříž, B. (CZ)
    Kott, I. (CZ)
    Beneš, Č. (CZ)
    Article numberMarch 13
    Source TitleVirology: Research & Reviews - ISSN 2514-4138
    Roč. 1, č. 1 (2017)
    Number of pages8 s.
    Languageeng - English
    CountryGB - United Kingdom
    Keywordstick-borne encephalitis incidence ; Ixodes ricinus ; ambient temperature ; poisson model ; generalized additive model ; seasonal trends
    Subject RIVBB - Applied Statistics, Operational Research
    OECD categoryStatistics and probability
    Institutional supportUIVT-O - RVO:67985807
    DOI10.15761/VRR.1000103
    AnnotationThe goal is to analyse the effect of climatic factors on the incidence of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) in three adjacent, high-incidence regions of the Czech Republic (CZ) that differed considerably in the baseline incidence and in the timing of high incidence period. The basis for the analysis were the meteorological data from a 30-year database (1982-2011) of daily air temperature and precipitation measurements and time-matched reports of TBE cases defined by the onset of symptoms. A semi-parametric Poisson regression model revealed a statistically significant relationship between the average daily ambient air temperature and incidence of TBE. The shapes of the dependence were similar in all three regions under study. The analysis of the available data did not show a statistically significant relationship between the precipitation amount and incidence of TBE. Other statistically significant predictors were the trend over calendar years, monthly seasonality and trend-seasonality interaction (the shape of the monthly seasonality varies over years), and day of week. The climate changes had differentiated effects on TBE increase depending on the local environmental conditions as can be illustrated by the variations between the three regions not only in the TBE incidence level but also in the shape of the trend over years.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Computer Science
    ContactTereza Šírová, sirova@cs.cas.cz, Tel.: 266 053 800
    Year of Publishing2018
Number of the records: 1  

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