Georgia's collaborative approach to expanding mosquito surveillance in response to Zika virus: a case study.

U.S. Army Medical Department journal Pub Date : 2017-01-01
R Christopher Rustin, Deonte Martin, Varadan Sevilimedu, Sarbesh Pandeya, Haresh Rochani, Rosmarie Kelly
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Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV) was declared an international public health emergency by the World Health Organization on February 1, 2016. Due to the known and estimated range of the ZIKV mosquito vectors, southern and central US states faced increased risk of ZIKV transmission. With the state of Georgia hosting the world's busiest international airport, a climate that supports the ZIKV vectors, and limited surveillance (13 counties) and response capacity, the Department of Public Health (DPH) was challenged to respond and prevent ZIKV transmission. This case study describes and evaluates the state's surveillance capacity before and after the declaration of ZIKV as a public health emergency.

Method: We analyzed surveillance data from the DPH to compare the geographical distribution of counties conducting surveillance, total number, and overall percentage of mosquito species trapped in 2015 to 2016. Counties conducting surveillance before and after the identification of the ZIKV risk were mapped using ArcMap 10.4.1. Using SAS (version 9.2) (SAS Institute, Inc, Cary, NC), we performed the independent 2 sample t test to test for differences in prevalence in both years, and a χ² analysis to test for differences between numbers of species across the 13 counties. In addition, weighted frequency counts of mosquitoes were used to test (χ²) an association between major mosquito vector species and 7 urban counties. Lastly, using data from 2012-2016, a time-trend analysis was conducted to evaluate temporal trends in species prevalence.

Results: From 2015 to 2016, surveillance increased from 13 to 57 (338% increase) counties geographically dispersed across Georgia. A total of 76,052 mosquitoes were trapped and identified in 2015 compared to 144,731 (90.3% increase) in 2016. Significant differences between species (P<.001) and significant associations (P<.0001) between 7 urban counties and major mosquito vectors were found. Significant differences in prevalence were found between several species and year highlighting species-year temporal trends.

Conclusions: The DPH collaborative response to ZIKV allowed a rapid increase in its surveillance footprint. Existing and new partnerships were developed with the military and local health departments to expand and share data. This additional surveillance data allowed DPH to make sound public health decisions regarding mosquito-borne disease risks and close gaps in data related to vector distribution.

格鲁吉亚为应对寨卡病毒扩大蚊子监测的合作方法:案例研究。
寨卡病毒(ZIKV)于2016年2月1日被世界卫生组织宣布为国际突发公共卫生事件。由于已知和估计的寨卡病毒蚊子传播媒介的范围,美国南部和中部各州面临寨卡病毒传播的风险增加。乔治亚州拥有世界上最繁忙的国际机场,气候有利于寨卡病毒病媒的传播,而且监测(13个县)和应对能力有限,因此公共卫生部在应对和预防寨卡病毒传播方面面临挑战。本案例研究描述并评估了该国在宣布寨卡病毒为突发公共卫生事件前后的监测能力。方法:对2015 - 2016年全国各监测县的地理分布、蚊种总数和总捕获比例进行分析。在确定寨卡病毒风险之前和之后进行监测的县使用arcmap10.4.1绘制地图。使用SAS(9.2版)(SAS Institute, Inc, Cary, NC),我们进行了独立样本t检验来检验两年中患病率的差异,并进行了χ 2分析来检验13个县物种数量之间的差异。采用加权蚊频计数法,对7个城市县主要媒介蚊种间的相关性进行χ 2检验。最后,利用2012-2016年的数据,进行了时间趋势分析,评估了物种流行度的时间趋势。结果:从2015年到2016年,监测从地理上分散在格鲁吉亚的13个县增加到57个县(增加了338%)。2015年共捕获和鉴定蚊虫76052只,而2016年为144731只(增长90.3%)。结论:DPH对ZIKV的合作应对使其监测足迹迅速增加。与军事和地方卫生部门建立了现有和新的伙伴关系,以扩大和共享数据。这些额外的监测数据使卫生部能够就蚊媒疾病风险作出合理的公共卫生决定,并弥补与病媒分布有关的数据差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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