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Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District

A favorable climatic condition for transmission of malaria prevails in Kokrajhar district throughout the year. A sizeable part of the district is covered by forest due to which dissimilar dynamics of malaria transmission emerge in forest and non-forest areas. Observed malaria incidence rates of fore...

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Autores principales: Nath, Dilip C., Mwchahary, Dimacha Dwibrang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Center of Science and Education 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4776956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23283041
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v5n1p90
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author Nath, Dilip C.
Mwchahary, Dimacha Dwibrang
author_facet Nath, Dilip C.
Mwchahary, Dimacha Dwibrang
author_sort Nath, Dilip C.
collection PubMed
description A favorable climatic condition for transmission of malaria prevails in Kokrajhar district throughout the year. A sizeable part of the district is covered by forest due to which dissimilar dynamics of malaria transmission emerge in forest and non-forest areas. Observed malaria incidence rates of forest area, non-forest area and the whole district over the period 2001-2010 were considered for analyzing temporal correlation between malaria incidence and climatic variables. Associations between the two were examined by Pearson correlation analysis. Cross-correlation tests were performed between pre-whitened series of climatic variable and malaria series. Linear regressions were used to obtain linear relationships between climatic factors and malaria incidence, while weighted least squares regression was used to construct models for explaining and estimating malaria incidence rates. Annual concentration of malaria incidence was analyzed by Markham technique by obtaining seasonal index. Forest area and non-forest area have distinguishable malaria seasons. Relative humidity was positively correlated with z malaria incidence, while temperature series were negatively correlated with non-forest malaria incidence. There was higher seasonality of concentration of malaria in the forest area than non-forest area. Significant correlation between annual changes in malaria cases in forest area and temperature was observed (coeff=0.689, p=0.040). Separate reliable models constructed for forecasting malaria incidence rates based on the combined influence of climatic variables on malaria incidence in different areas of the district were able to explain substantial percentage of observed variability in the incidence rates (R(2)(adj)=45.4%, 50.6%, 47.2%; p< .001 for all). There is an intricate association between climatic variables and malaria incidence of the district. Climatic variables influence malaria incidence in forest area and non-forest area in different ways. Rainfall plays a primary role in characterizing malaria incidences in the district. Malaria parasites in the district had adapted to a relative humidity condition higher than the normal range for transmission in India. Instead of individual influence of the climatic variables, their combined influence was utilizable for construction of models.
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spelling pubmed-47769562016-04-21 Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District Nath, Dilip C. Mwchahary, Dimacha Dwibrang Glob J Health Sci Articles A favorable climatic condition for transmission of malaria prevails in Kokrajhar district throughout the year. A sizeable part of the district is covered by forest due to which dissimilar dynamics of malaria transmission emerge in forest and non-forest areas. Observed malaria incidence rates of forest area, non-forest area and the whole district over the period 2001-2010 were considered for analyzing temporal correlation between malaria incidence and climatic variables. Associations between the two were examined by Pearson correlation analysis. Cross-correlation tests were performed between pre-whitened series of climatic variable and malaria series. Linear regressions were used to obtain linear relationships between climatic factors and malaria incidence, while weighted least squares regression was used to construct models for explaining and estimating malaria incidence rates. Annual concentration of malaria incidence was analyzed by Markham technique by obtaining seasonal index. Forest area and non-forest area have distinguishable malaria seasons. Relative humidity was positively correlated with z malaria incidence, while temperature series were negatively correlated with non-forest malaria incidence. There was higher seasonality of concentration of malaria in the forest area than non-forest area. Significant correlation between annual changes in malaria cases in forest area and temperature was observed (coeff=0.689, p=0.040). Separate reliable models constructed for forecasting malaria incidence rates based on the combined influence of climatic variables on malaria incidence in different areas of the district were able to explain substantial percentage of observed variability in the incidence rates (R(2)(adj)=45.4%, 50.6%, 47.2%; p< .001 for all). There is an intricate association between climatic variables and malaria incidence of the district. Climatic variables influence malaria incidence in forest area and non-forest area in different ways. Rainfall plays a primary role in characterizing malaria incidences in the district. Malaria parasites in the district had adapted to a relative humidity condition higher than the normal range for transmission in India. Instead of individual influence of the climatic variables, their combined influence was utilizable for construction of models. Canadian Center of Science and Education 2013-01 2012-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4776956/ /pubmed/23283041 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v5n1p90 Text en Copyright: © Canadian Center of Science and Education http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
Nath, Dilip C.
Mwchahary, Dimacha Dwibrang
Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title_full Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title_fullStr Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title_full_unstemmed Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title_short Association between Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence: A Study in Kokrajhar District of Assam, India: Climatic Variables and Malaria Incidence in Kokrajhar District
title_sort association between climatic variables and malaria incidence: a study in kokrajhar district of assam, india: climatic variables and malaria incidence in kokrajhar district
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4776956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23283041
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v5n1p90
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