Author:
Chen Qi,Rui Jia,Hu Qingqing,Peng Ying,Zhang Hao,Zhao Zeyu,Tong Yeqing,Wu Yang,Su Yanhua,Zhao Benhua,Guan Xuhua,Chen Tianmu
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Shigellosis is one of the main diarrhea diseases in developing countries. However, the transmissibility of shigellosis remains unclear.
Methods
We used the dataset of shigellosis cases reported between January 2005 and December 2017, from Hubei Province, China. A mathematical model was developed based on the natural history and the transmission mechanism of the disease. By fitting the data using the model, transmission relative rate from person to person (b) and from reservoir to person (bw), and the effective reproduction number (Reff) were estimated. To simulate the contribution of b and bw during the transmission, we performed a “knock-out” simulation in four scenarios: A) b = 0 and bw = 0; B) b = 0; C) bw = 0; D) control (no intervention).
Results
A total of 130,770 shigellosis cases were reported in Hubei province, among which 13 cases were dead. The median annual incidence was 19.96 per 100,000 persons (range: 5.99 per 100,000 persons – 29.47 per 100,000 persons) with a decreased trend (trend χ2 = 25,470.27, P < 0.001). The mean values of b and bw were 0.0898 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.0851–0.0946) and 1.1264 × 10− 9 (95% CI: 4.1123 × 10− 10–1.8416 × 10− 9), respectively. The “knock-out” simulation showed that the number of cases simulated by scenario A was almost the same as scenario B, and scenario C was almost the same as scenario D. The mean value of Reff of shigellosis was 1.19 (95% CI: 1.13–1.25) and decreased slightly with a Linear model until it decreased to an epidemic threshold of 0.99 (95% CI: 0.65–1.34) in 2029.
Conclusions
The incidence of shigellosis is still in high level. The transmissibility of the disease is low in Hubei Province. The transmission would be interrupted in the year of 2029.
Funder
The Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Molecular Vaccinology and Molecular Diagnostics
The Special innovative team project of Hubei Health and Family Planning Commission of China
The Key Support Project of Hubei Health and Family Planning Commission of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
20 articles.
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