Literature DB >> 10997837

A statistical analysis of the seasonality in pulmonary tuberculosis.

M Ríos1, J M García, J A Sánchez, D Pérez.   

Abstract

The present study examines whether pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) has an annual seasonal pattern. A mathematical model is also obtained to forecast the pattern of incidence. The data for the study are the cases of PTB reported throughout Spain, published in the Epidemiology Bulletin by the Carlos III Health Center of the Spanish Ministry of Health in a 26-year period, 1971-1996. The analytical results show that the low rates in tuberculosis notifications over the period 1971-1981 have changed, halting in 1982 and reversing with high incidence from 1983 onwards. An annual seasonal pattern was also shown with higher incidence during summer and autumn. With the mathematical model we predicted the disease behaviour in 1997 and the results were compared to the reported cases. In Spain, as in several industrialised countries, the reason for this recent increase in the number of reported cases is, mainly, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. The seasonal trend, with higher incidence in winter, can be attributed to the increase in indoor activities, much more common than in a warm climate. The tubercle bacilli expelled from infected persons in a room with closed windows may remain infectious for a long time, increasing the risk of exposure of healthy persons to the bacilli. As the preclinical period, from exposure to clinical onset, may be of several weeks, the high incidence in spring would be explained. Moreover, in winter and spring the infections of viral aetiology, like flu, are more frequent and cause immunological deficiency which is another reason for the seasonal trend observed. An incidence greater than that foreseen by the mathematical model would express a failure in epidemiologic surveillance, and thus the results of this study may be used to assess a quality of the preventive measures.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10997837     DOI: 10.1023/a:1007653329972

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0393-2990            Impact factor:   8.082


  14 in total

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  36 in total

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3.  Does tuberculosis have a seasonal pattern among migrant population entering Iran?

Authors:  Mahmood Moosazadeh; Narges Khanjani; Abbas Bahrampour; Mahshid Nasehi
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4.  An Advanced Data-Driven Hybrid Model of SARIMA-NNNAR for Tuberculosis Incidence Time Series Forecasting in Qinghai Province, China.

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5.  Comparative study of four time series methods in forecasting typhoid fever incidence in China.

Authors:  Xingyu Zhang; Yuanyuan Liu; Min Yang; Tao Zhang; Alistair A Young; Xiaosong Li
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7.  Forecasting the Tuberculosis Incidence Using a Novel Ensemble Empirical Mode Decomposition-Based Data-Driven Hybrid Model in Tibet, China.

Authors:  Jizhen Li; Yuhong Li; Ming Ye; Sanqiao Yao; Chongchong Yu; Lei Wang; Weidong Wu; Yongbin Wang
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