Copula based trivariate spatial modeling of childhood illnesses in Western African countries

IF 2.1 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Epidemiology Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.sste.2023.100591
Ezra Gayawan , Osafu Augustine Egbon , Oyelola Adegboye
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Abstract

Acute respiratory infections (ARI), diarrhea, and fever are three common childhood illnesses, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. This study investigates the marginal and pairwise correlated effects of these diseases across Western African countries in a single analytical framework. Using data from nationally representative cross-sectional Demographic and Health Surveys, the study analyzed specific and correlated effects of each pair of childhood morbidity from ARI, diarrhea, and fever using copula regression models in fourteen contiguous Western African countries. Data concerning childhood demographic and socio-economic conditions were used as covariates. In this cross-sectional analysis of 152,125 children aged 0–59 months, the prevalence of ARI was 6.9%, diarrhea, 13.8%, and fever 19.6%. The results showed a positive correlation and geographical variation in the prevalence of the three illnesses across the study region. The estimated correlation and 95% confidence interval between diarrhea and fever is 0.431(0.300,0.539); diarrhea and ARI is 0.270(0.096,0.422); and fever and ARI is 0.502(0.350,0.614). The marginal and correlated spatial random effects reveal within-country spatial dependence. Source of water and access to electricity was significantly associated with any of the three illnesses, while television, birth order, and gender were associated with diarrhea or fever. The place of residence and access to newspapers were associated with fever or ARI. There was an increased likelihood of childhood ARI, diarrhea, and fever, which peaked at about ten months but decreased substantially thereafter. Mother’s age was associated with a reduced likelihood of the three illnesses. The maps generated could be resourceful for area-specific policy-making to speed up mitigation processes.

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基于Copula的西非国家儿童疾病的三变量空间模型
急性呼吸道感染(ARI)、腹泻和发烧是三种常见的儿童疾病,特别是在撒哈拉以南非洲。本研究在单一分析框架中调查了这些疾病在西非国家的边际效应和两两相关效应。该研究使用来自全国代表性的横断面人口与健康调查的数据,在14个连续的西非国家中使用连通性回归模型分析了ARI、腹泻和发烧的每对儿童发病率的具体和相关影响。有关儿童人口和社会经济条件的数据被用作协变量。在对152125名0-59月龄儿童的横断面分析中,ARI患病率为6.9%,腹泻患病率为13.8%,发烧患病率为19.6%。结果显示,在研究区域内,这三种疾病的患病率呈正相关且存在地理差异。腹泻与发热的估计相关性和95%可信区间为0.431(0.300,0.539);腹泻和ARI分别为0.270(0.096,0.422);发热和ARI分别为0.502(0.350,0.614)。边际和相关空间随机效应揭示了国家内部的空间依赖性。水源和电力供应与这三种疾病中的任何一种都有显著关系,而电视、出生顺序和性别与腹泻或发烧有关。居住地点和获取报纸的途径与发烧或急性呼吸道感染有关。儿童发生急性呼吸道感染、腹泻和发烧的可能性增加,在10个月左右达到高峰,但此后大幅下降。母亲的年龄与患这三种疾病的可能性降低有关。生成的地图可为特定地区的决策提供资源,以加快缓解进程。
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来源期刊
Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Epidemiology
Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Epidemiology PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
8.80%
发文量
63
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