Litcius/Paper detail

Relative transmissibility of shigellosis among male and female individuals: a modeling study in Hubei Province, China

Zeyu Zhao, Qi Chen, Bin Zhao, Mikah Ngwanguong Hannah, Ning Wang, Yuxin Wang, Xianfa Xuan, Jia Rui, Meijie Chu, Shanshan Yu, Yao Wang, Xingchun Liu, Ran An, Li-Li Pan, Yi‐Chen Chiang, Yanhua Su, Benhua Zhao, Tianmu Chen, Benhua Zhao, Tianmu Chen

2020Infectious Diseases of Poverty22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Background Developing countries exhibit a high disease burden from shigellosis. Owing to the different incidences in males and females, this study aims to analyze the features involved in the transmission of shigellosis among male (subscript m ) and female (subscript f ) individuals using a newly developed sex-based model. Methods The data of reported shigellosis cases were collected from the China Information System for Disease Control and Prevention in Hubei Province from 2005 to 2017. A sex-based Susceptible–Exposed–Infectious/Asymptomatic–Recovered (SEIAR) model was applied to explore the dataset, and a sex-age-based SEIAR model was applied in 2010 to explore the sex- and age-specific transmissions. Results From 2005 to 2017, 130 770 shigellosis cases (including 73 981 male and 56 789 female cases) were reported in Hubei Province. The SEIAR model exhibited a significant fitting effect with the shigellosis data ( P < 0.001). The median values of the shigellosis transmission were 2.3225 × 10 8 for SAR mm (secondary attack rate from male to male), 2.5729 × 10 8 for SAR mf , 2.7630 × 10 -8 for SAR fm , and 2.1061 × 10 -8 for SAR ff . The top five mean values of the transmission relative rate in 2010 (where the subscript 1 was defined as male and age ≤ 5 years, 2 was male and age 6 to 59 years, 3 was male and age ≥ 60 years, 4 was female and age ≤ 5 years, 5 was female and age 6 to 59 years, and 6 was male and age ≥ 60 years) were 5.76 × 10 -8 for β 61 , 5.32 × 10 -8 for β 31 , 4.01 × 10 -8 for β 34 , 7.52 × 10 -9 for β 62 , and 6.04 × 10 -9 for β 64 . Conclusions The transmissibility of shigellosis differed among male and female individuals. The transmissibility between the genders was higher than that within the genders, particularly female-to-male transmission. The most important route in children (age ≤ 5 years) was transmission from the elderly (age ≥ 60 years). Therefore, the greatest interventions should be applied in females and the elderly.

Topics & Concepts

ShigellosisMedicineDemographyTransmission (telecommunications)Public healthDisease controlEpidemiologyChinaShigellaInternal medicineEnvironmental healthBiologyGeographyPathologyGeneticsSociologyGeneEngineeringEscherichia coliArchaeologyElectrical engineeringEscherichia coli research studiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyTravel-related health issues
Relative transmissibility of shigellosis among male and female individuals: a modeling study in Hubei Province, China | Litcius