| Literature DB >> 35506926 |
Youngji Jo1, Yeonsoo Baik1, Sourya Shrestha1, Jeffrey Pennington1, Isabella Gomes1, Mehdi Reja2,3, Shamiul Islam4, Tapash Roy3, Hamidah Hussain5, David Dowdy1.
Abstract
We developed a novel method to align two data sources (TB notifications and the Demographic Health Survey, DHS) captured at different geographic scales. We used this method to identify sociodemographic indicators - specifically population density - that were ecologically correlated with elevated TB notification rates across wards (~100 000 people) in Dhaka, Bangladesh. We found population density was the variable most closely correlated with ward-level TB notification rates (Spearman's rank correlation 0.45). Our approach can be useful, as publicly available data (e.g. DHS data) could help identify factors that are ecologically associated with disease burden when more granular data (e.g. ward-level TB notifications) are not available. Use of this approach might help in designing spatially targeted interventions for TB and other diseases in settings of weak existing data on disease burden at the subdistrict level.Entities:
Keywords: Dhaka; gravity model; sociodemographic risk factors; spatial analysis; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35506926 PMCID: PMC8479848 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268821001679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Spatial distribution of TB incidence, population density, proportions of children (age under 5 years) and elderly (age over 65 years). The figure shows the spatial distribution of TB incidence as estimated by TB notification data at the ward level (panel A), and model-based estimates of: population density (panel B), proportions of population under 5 years old (panel C) and over 65 years old (panel D). The latter three measures are based on overlying data from the BDHS (collected across 23 clusters) onto the 90 wards of Dhaka City Corporation, as described in the text. DNCC consists of 36 wards (wards number: 1–23, 37–47, 54–55) and DSCC consists of 54 wards (ward number: 24–36, 48–53,56–90). (a) Average TB notification rate in 2014 and 2017. (b) Population density (population/km2) in 2015. (c) % of children (age under 5 years) in 2014. (d) % of elderly (age over 65 years) in 2014.
Sociodemographic variables from the Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey and their ward-level correlations with incidence of TB
| Dhaka City Corporation (Number of wards = 90) | Median (IQR) | Spearman rank correlation with TB notification rate |
|---|---|---|
| Average TB notification rate between 2014 and 2017 (per 100 000 per year) | 279 (163–425) | – |
| Population density (persons/km2) | 59 587 (55 783–61 757) | 0.45 |
| Male sex (%) | 51 (51–52) | −0.02 |
| Age over 65 years (%) | 3.3 (3.0–3.6) | 0.28 |
| Age under 5 years (%) | 10 (9.7–11.0) | −0.34 |
| Higher than secondary level education (%) | 25 (23–26) | 0.09 |
| Household wealth index (×100 000) | 1.80 (1.74–1.85) | 0.17 |
TB, Tuberculosis.
Estimated from the national TB notification rate.
Extracted from the 2015 United Nation population report [2].
Extracted from the Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey in 2013–2014 [2].
A standardised score representing a composite measure of a household‘s cumulative living standard calculated on household‘s selected assets.