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COVID-19 prevention measures reduce dengue spread in Yunnan Province, China, but do not reduce established outbreak

Ziyang Sheng, Mingwei Li, Rubi Yang, Y.H. Liu, Xin Yin, Jiarong Mao, Heidi E. Brown, Jing An, Hongyin Zhou, Peigang Wang

2021Emerging Microbes & Infections15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic and measures against it provided a unique opportunity to understand the transmission of other infectious diseases and to evaluate the efficacy of COVID-19 prevention measures on them. Here we show a dengue epidemic in Yunnan, China, during the pandemic of COVID-19 was dramatically reduced compared to non-pandemic years and, importantly, spread was confined to only one city, Ruili. Three key features characterized this dengue outbreak: (i) the urban-to-suburban spread was efficiently blocked; (ii) the scale of epidemic in urban region was less affected; (iii) co-circulation of multiple strains was attenuated. These results suggested that countermeasures taken during COVID-19 pandemic are efficient to prevent dengue transmission between cities and from urban to suburban, as well to reduce the co-circulation of multiple serotypes or genotypes. Nevertheless, as revealed by the spatial analysis, once the dengue outbreak was established, its distribution was very stable and resistant to measures against COVID-19, implying the possibility to develop a precise prediction method.

Topics & Concepts

Dengue feverOutbreakPandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Transmission (telecommunications)ChinaGeographyEnvironmental healthVirologySocioeconomicsMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseArchaeologyEngineeringPathologyElectrical engineeringSociologyMosquito-borne diseases and controlCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesViral Infections and Vectors
COVID-19 prevention measures reduce dengue spread in Yunnan Province, China, but do not reduce established outbreak | Litcius