Mohammad Nayeem Hasan
Shifting Geographical Transmission Patterns: Characterizing the 2023 Fatal Dengue Outbreak in Bangladesh
Nayeem Hasan, Mohammad; Rahman, Mahbubur; Fahim Uddin, Mohammad; Ali Akbar Ashrafi, Shah; Rahman, Kazi Mizanur; Kumar Paul, Kishor; Rahman Sarker, Mohammad Ferdous; Haque, Farhana; Sharma, Avinash; Papakonstantinou, Danai; Paudyal, Priyamvada; Asaduzzaman, Md; Zumla, Alimuddin; Haider, Najmul
Authors
Mahbubur Rahman
Mohammad Fahim Uddin
Shah Ali Akbar Ashrafi
Kazi Mizanur Rahman
Kishor Kumar Paul
Mohammad Ferdous Rahman Sarker
Farhana Haque
Avinash Sharma
Danai Papakonstantinou d.papakonstantinou@keele.ac.uk
Priyamvada Paudyal p.paudyal@keele.ac.uk
Md Asaduzzaman
Alimuddin Zumla
Najmul Haider n.haider@keele.ac.uk
Contributors
Mohammad Nayeem Hasan
Other
Mahbubur Rahman
Other
Mohammad Fahim Uddin
Other
Shah Ali Akbar Ashrafi
Other
Kazi Rahman
Other
Kishor Kumar Paul
Other
Mohammad Ferdous Rahman Sarker
Other
Farhana Haque
Other
Avinash Sharma
Other
Danai Papakonstantinou
Other
Priyamvada Paudyal
Other
Md Asaduzzaman
Other
Professor Sir Alimuddin Zumla
Other
Najmul Haider
Other
Abstract
In 2023, Bangladesh experienced its largest and deadliest outbreak of Dengue virus (DENV), reporting the highest-ever recorded annual cases and deaths. We aimed to characterize the geographical transmission of the DENV in Bangladesh. From 1 Jan – 31 Dec 2023, we extracted and analyzed daily data on dengue cases and deaths from the national Management Information System (MIS). We performed a generalized linear mixed model to identify the associations between division-wise daily dengue counts and various geographical and meteorological covariates. The number of Dengue cases reported in 2023 was 1.3 times higher than the total number recorded in the past 23 years (321,179 vs. 244,246), with twice as many deaths than the total fatalities recorded in the past 23 years (1705 vs. 849). Of the 1705 deaths in 2023, 67.4% (n=1015) expired within one day after hospital admission. The divisions southern to Dhaka had a higher dengue incidence/1000 population (2.30 vs. 0.50, p<0,0.01), and higher mean annual temperatures (27.46 vs. 26.54 °C) than the northern divisions. The average daily temperature (IRR: 1.13, 95% CI: 1.11-1.14), urban and rural population ratio of the divisions (IRR: 1.04, 95% CI: 1.03-1.04), showed a positive, and rainfall (IRR: 0.99, 95% CI: 0.98-0.99) showed a negative association with dengue cases in each division. We observed a major geographical shift of Dengue cases from the capital city Dhaka to different districts of Bangladesh with a higher incidence of dengue in the southern division of Bangladesh, influenced by temperature and urbanization.
Citation
Nayeem Hasan, M., Rahman, M., Fahim Uddin, M., Ali Akbar Ashrafi, S., Rahman, K. M., Kumar Paul, K., …Haider, N. Shifting Geographical Transmission Patterns: Characterizing the 2023 Fatal Dengue Outbreak in Bangladesh
Working Paper Type | Working Paper |
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Deposit Date | Jun 13, 2024 |
Public URL | https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/848127 |
Publisher URL | https://gresis.osc.int//records/qka90-ra913 |
Additional Information | Appears to be a preprint article - will assign preprint tag |
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