行星儿童健康和肠道观察站(Plan EO):低收入和中等收入国家肠道传染病及其风险因素和干预措施的跨学科研究倡议和基于网络的气候知情图谱的协议。

Josh M Colston, Pavel Chernyavskiy, Lauren Gardner, Malena Nong, Bin Fang, Eric Houpt, Samarth Swarup, Hamada Badr, Benjamin Zaitchik, Venkataraman Lakshmi, Margaret Kosek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:腹泻仍然是世界各地儿童疾病的主要原因,由各种生态敏感病原体引起。新兴的行星健康运动强调人类健康与自然系统的相互依存性,其重点一直放在传染病及其与环境和人类过程的相互作用上。与此同时,大数据时代激发了公众对传染病交互式网络仪表盘的兴趣。然而,肠道传染病在很大程度上被这些发展所忽视。方法:行星儿童健康和娱乐观察站(Plan EO)是一项新举措,建立在许多中低收入国家的流行病学家、气候学家、生物信息学家、水文学家以及研究人员之间现有的伙伴关系基础上。其目的是为研究和利益相关者群体提供一个证据基础,以确定肠道病原体特异性儿童健康干预措施(如新型疫苗)的地理目标。该倡议将制作、策划和传播与肠道病原体分布及其环境和社会人口决定因素有关的空间数据产品。讨论:随着气候变化的加速,迫切需要以高时空分辨率对腹泻疾病负担进行病因特异性估计。EO计划旨在通过向研究和利益相关者社区免费提供严格获得的、可推广的疾病负担估计,来解决关键挑战和知识差距。预处理的环境和地球观测衍生的空间数据产品将被容纳、不断更新,并在网页内和下载时向研究和利益相关者社区公开。然后,这些输入可用于识别和针对生活在传播热点地区的优先人群,并用于决策、情景规划和疾病负担预测。研究注册:PROSPERO方案编号CRD42023384709。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Planetary Child Health & Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO): a protocol for an interdisciplinary research initiative and web-based dashboard for mapping enteric infectious diseases and their risk factors and interventions in LMICs.

The Planetary Child Health & Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO): a protocol for an interdisciplinary research initiative and web-based dashboard for mapping enteric infectious diseases and their risk factors and interventions in LMICs.

The Planetary Child Health & Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO): a protocol for an interdisciplinary research initiative and web-based dashboard for mapping enteric infectious diseases and their risk factors and interventions in LMICs.

The Planetary Child Health & Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO): a protocol for an interdisciplinary research initiative and web-based dashboard for mapping enteric infectious diseases and their risk factors and interventions in LMICs.

Background: Diarrhea remains a leading cause of childhood illness throughout the world that is increasing due to climate change and is caused by various species of ecologically sensitive pathogens. The emerging Planetary Health movement emphasizes the interdependence of human health with natural systems, and much of its focus has been on infectious diseases and their interactions with environmental and human processes. Meanwhile, the era of big data has engendered a public appetite for interactive web-based dashboards for infectious diseases. However, enteric infectious diseases have been largely overlooked by these developments.

Methods: The Planetary Child Health and Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO) is a new initiative that builds on existing partnerships between epidemiologists, climatologists, bioinformaticians, and hydrologists as well as investigators in numerous low- and middle-income countries. Its objective is to provide the research and stakeholder community with an evidence base for the geographical targeting of enteropathogen-specific child health interventions such as novel vaccines. The initiative will produce, curate, and disseminate spatial data products relating to the distribution of enteric pathogens and their environmental and sociodemographic determinants.

Discussion: As climate change accelerates there is an urgent need for etiology-specific estimates of diarrheal disease burden at high spatiotemporal resolution. Plan-EO aims to address key challenges and knowledge gaps by making rigorously obtained, generalizable disease burden estimates freely available and accessible to the research and stakeholder communities. Pre-processed environmental and EO-derived spatial data products will be housed, continually updated, and made publicly available to the research and stakeholder communities both within the webpage itself and for download. These inputs can then be used to identify and target priority populations living in transmission hotspots and for decision-making, scenario-planning, and disease burden projection.

Study registration: PROSPERO protocol #CRD42023384709.

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