吉布提、索马里和也门爆发黄热病的可能性

Keith James Fraser, Laurence Cibrelus, Jennifer Horton, Chiori Kodama, J. Erin Staples, Katy A.M. Gaythorpe
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摘要

在人类流动以及气候变化直接和间接影响的推动下,虫媒病毒疾病传入目前尚未流行的国家是一个全球关注的问题。在世界卫生组织东地中海地区,吉布提共和国、索马里联邦共和国和也门共和国这三个国家目前被认为有爆发黄热病的潜在或中度风险,因此需要对输入性黄热病爆发的可能性进行评估。吉布提和索马里与黄热病流行的国家有陆地边界和大量的跨境流动,而也门目前正经历一场危机,严重影响了医疗保健基础设施,并且已经出现了其他类似虫媒病毒的疑似爆发,如登革热、基孔肯雅热和西尼罗河病毒。在此,我们对黄热病在吉布提、索马里和也门的传入和传播风险进行了数学建模评估。该模型由两部分组成:预测相关国家个别行政区域的感染者输入风险,以及使用动态黄热病模型来模拟黄热病病毒在同一区域内的传播。我们的研究结果表明,吉布提、索马里和也门的某些地区爆发黄热病的风险高于其他地区,其中也门西部沿海地区(该地区最近爆发了其他虫媒病毒)、索马里与埃塞俄比亚联邦民主共和国和肯尼亚共和国接壤的地区以及吉布提市等地区的风险较高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Yellow fever outbreak potential in Djibouti, Somalia and Yemen
The importation of arbovirus diseases into countries where they are not currently endemic is a global concern, driven by human movement and direct and indirect climate change effects. In the World Health Organization Eastern Mediterranean region, three countries - the Republic of Djibouti, the Federal Republic of Somalia, and the Republic of Yemen - are currently considered to be at potential or moderate risk for yellow fever outbreaks, and an assessment for outbreak potential in the event of importation was sought. Djibouti and Somalia share land borders and significant cross-border movement with countries where yellow fever is endemic, while Yemen is currently experiencing a crisis which has severely impacted healthcare infrastructure, and has already seen suspected outbreaks of other similar arboviruses such as dengue, chikungunya and West Nile. Here we present a mathematical modelling assessment of the risk of introduction and propagation of yellow fever in Djibouti, Somalia and Yemen. This modelling has two components: projecting the risk of importation of infectious individuals into individual administrative regions of the countries of interest, and the use of a dynamic yellow fever model to model yellow fever virus transmission within the same regions. We present results showing that certain regions of Djibouti, Somalia and Yemen are at higher risk than others for yellow fever outbreaks, with the risk being higher in some areas such as the western coastal regions of Yemen (an area that has experienced recent outbreaks of other arboviruses), regions of Somalia bordering both the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and the Republic of Kenya, and Djibouti City.
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