Titre : | Association Between Delayed Dengue Reporting and Subsequent Dengue Cases in Bangkok |
Auteurs : | Fauzan Rachmatullah |
Type de document : | Mémoire |
Année de publication : | 2022 |
Description : | 37p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Classement : | MPH22/ (Master EHESP International master of public health - MPH) |
Mots-clés : | Dengue ; Thaïlande ; Surveillance épidémiologique ; Recueil données ; Etude ; Facteur socioéconomique ; Facteur sociodémographique ; Déclaration maladie |
Résumé : |
Objective: Bangkok is one of the hotspots for dengue transmission with an average annual incidence of 172 cases per 10,000 population from 2003 to 2017. Managing dengue through rapid detection of the symptoms until investigation is crucial in controlling the disease. However, delays might happen along the way, which leads to the main objective of this study, to explore the association of delayed dengue reporting with subsequent dengue cases while also expanding on understanding underlying factors associated with the delay itself.
Methods: Dengue surveillance data at a sub-district level in 2013 from the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) and the 2010 census data from National Statistical Office (NSO) were used for this study. A generalised linear model (GLM) and a SatScanTM analysis were done to determine the association between delayed time with socio-economic and demographic factors and subsequent dengue cases respectively. Dengue mapping using QGIS was also done along with the analysis to understand dengue patterns during the time of study. Results: Delayed time during hospital presentation to data entry was the longest (average of 6.66 days) compared to the delay time from first symptom to hospital manifestation and from data entry to investigation. Various socio-economic, environmental, and demographic factors such as dengue incidence, area size, home ownership and household possessions, nationality, education, gender, and occupation were found to be associated with delayed time during different periods. Dengue clusters were also found in Bangkok with a 14 and 28 days maximum duration, but there was no evidence to believe that delayed reporting is associated with subsequent dengue cases. Conclusion: Despite finding no evidence of association between delayed reporting and subsequent dengue cases, it would still be relevant to keep improving the surveillance efforts to control dengue in Bangkok. Further studies with different approaches and settings are highly encouraged as this topic is relatively novel. |
Diplôme : | Master MPH of public health |
Plan de classement simplifié : | Master of Public Health - master international de Santé Public (MPH) |
En ligne : | https://documentation.ehesp.fr/memoires/2022/mph/fauzan_rachmatullah.pdf |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
096493 | MPH22/0002 | Mémoire | Rennes | Salle des Glénan | Empruntable Disponible |