| Literature DB >> 26196670 |
Kiersten J Kugeler, Grace M Farley, Joseph D Forrester, Paul S Mead.
Abstract
Lyme disease occurs in specific geographic regions of the United States. We present a method for defining high-risk counties based on observed versus expected number of reported human Lyme disease cases. Applying this method to successive periods shows substantial geographic expansion of counties at high risk for Lyme disease.Entities:
Keywords: Borrelia burgdorferi; Lyme disease; United States; bacteria; epidemiology; surveillance; tickborne; vector-borne infections; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26196670 PMCID: PMC4517724 DOI: 10.3201/eid2108.141878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigureUnited States counties with high incidence of Lyme disease by the period when they first met the designated high-incidence criteria, 1993–2012. High-incidence counties were defined as those within a spatial cluster of elevated incidence and those with >2 times the number of reported Lyme disease cases as were expected (based on the population at risk).
Data for United States counties with high incidence of human Lyme disease during four 5-year periods, 1993–2012*
| Location, period | No. counties | Relative risk, range† | Average annual incidence, range‡ | No. counties added to high-incidence status | No. counties removed from high- incidence status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | |||||
| 1993–1997 | 69 | 2.3–91.1 | 10.6–402.7 | NA | NA |
| 1998–2002 | 130 | 2.0–152.6 | 12.3–912.9 | 71 | 10 |
| 2003–2007 | 197 | 2.0–101.3 | 15.0–742.8 | 72 | 5 |
| 2008–2012 | 260 | 2.0–48.6 | 15.9–381.4 | 72 | 9 |
| Northeastern focus | |||||
| 1993–1997 | 43 | 2.3–91.1 | 10.6–402.7 | NA | NA |
| 1998–2002 | 90 | 2.0–152.6 | 12.3–912.9 | 50 | 3 |
| 2003–2007 | 130 | 2.0–101.3 | 15.0–742.8 | 45 | 5 |
| 2008–2012 | 182 | 2.0–48.6 | 15.9–381.4 | 60 | 8 |
| North-central focus | |||||
| 1993–1997 | 22 | 2.6–41.3 | 12.1–189.6 | NA | NA |
| 1998–2002 | 40 | 2.0–35.3 | 12.4–217.3 | 21 | 3 |
| 2003–2007 | 67 | 2.0–29.8 | 15.0–222.7 | 27 | 0 |
| 2008–2012 | 78 | 2.1–28.1 | 16.1–220.7 | 12 | 1 |
*In the first period, 4 counties in the southeastern United States met high-incidence criteria but are not included in the geographic focus–specific data. NA, not applicable. †Relative risk is observed number of cases over a period divided by expected number of cases for the population at risk (). For this analysis, high-incidence counties had a relative risk of >2.0. ‡Incidence is reported cases per 100,000 residents per year; population used was average population at risk during a period (US census data for midpoint of each period).