| Literature DB >> 20979609 |
Eric F Lambin1, Annelise Tran, Sophie O Vanwambeke, Catherine Linard, Valérie Soti.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Landscape attributes influence spatial variations in disease risk or incidence. We present a review of the key findings from eight case studies that we conducted in Europe and West Africa on the impact of land changes on emerging or re-emerging vector-borne diseases and/or zoonoses. The case studies concern West Nile virus transmission in Senegal, tick-borne encephalitis incidence in Latvia, sandfly abundance in the French Pyrenees, Rift Valley Fever in the Ferlo (Senegal), West Nile Fever and the risk of malaria re-emergence in the Camargue, and rodent-borne Puumala hantavirus and Lyme borreliosis in Belgium.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20979609 PMCID: PMC2984574 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-9-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Description of the eight case studies included in the review
| flavivirus | flavivirus | protozoan parasite | phlebovirus | flavivirus | hantavirus | spirochetal bacteria | eukaryotic protist | |
| mosquito | tick | sandfly | mosquito | mosquito | rodent | tick | mosquito | |
| Senegal river basin | Latvia/northeastern Latvia | French Pyrennees | Ferlo, Senegal | Camargue, France | Belgium | Belgium | Camargue, France | |
| department | country | 3 departments | department | ecounit | country | country | ecounit | |
| 30 m | 100-30 m | 30 m | 2.4 m | 30 m | 30 m, municipality | municipality | 30 m | |
| semi-arid | temperate | mediterranean | semi-arid | mediterranean | temperate | temperate | mediterranean | |
| horse serology | human cases | sandfly trapping | ruminant serology | horse & bird serology | rodent serology; human cases | human cases | mosquito trapping | |
| statistical | statistical | statistical | statistical; simulation model | simulation model | statistical | statistical | Multi-agent simulation | |
Figure 1Larval index map for the mosquito .
Validation of the ten propositions proposed in this paper with the eight case studies included in the review
| E | E | + | E | E | E | E | + | |
| E | E | + | E | E | ||||
| E | + | E | ||||||
| + | + | E | + | + | ||||
| + | E | + | ||||||
| E | E | + | E | |||||
| E | + | E | ||||||
| E | E | E | + | |||||
| E | ||||||||
| E | E | E | E | |||||
E: empirical evidence from that case study
+: case study is consistent with the proposition, based on the literature
-: case study is in disagreement the with proposition, based on the literature
Figure 2Graphical representation of the landscape determinants of disease transmission. The numbers refer to the ten propositions formulated in this paper.
Figure 3Spread of the mosquito . Red isolines depict the mosquito density. Vegetation is represented in green and bare soil in yellow.