Geographical drivers and climate-linked dynamics of Lassa fever in Nigeria.

David W Redding ORCID logo; Rory Gibb ORCID logo; Chioma C Dan-Nwafor ORCID logo; Elsie AIlori; Rimamdeyati UsmanYashe; Saliu HOladele; Michael OAmedu; AkanimoIniobong; Lauren AAttfield; Christl A Donnelly ORCID logo; +3 more... Ibrahim Abubakar ORCID logo; Kate E Jones ORCID logo; ChikweIhekweazu; (2021) Geographical drivers and climate-linked dynamics of Lassa fever in Nigeria. Nature communications, 12 (1). 5759-. ISSN 2041-1723 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25910-y
Copy

Lassa fever is a longstanding public health concern in West Africa. Recent molecular studies have confirmed the fundamental role of the rodent host (Mastomys natalensis) in driving human infections, but control and prevention efforts remain hampered by a limited baseline understanding of the disease's true incidence, geographical distribution and underlying drivers. Here, we show that Lassa fever occurrence and incidence is influenced by climate, poverty, agriculture and urbanisation factors. However, heterogeneous reporting processes and diagnostic laboratory access also appear to be important drivers of the patchy distribution of observed disease incidence. Using spatiotemporal predictive models we show that including climatic variability added retrospective predictive value over a baseline model (11% decrease in out-of-sample predictive error). However, predictions for 2020 show that a climate-driven model performs similarly overall to the baseline model. Overall, with ongoing improvements in surveillance there may be potential for forecasting Lassa fever incidence to inform health planning.



picture_as_pdf
Geographical drivers and climate-linked dynamics of Lassa fever in Nigeria.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: 3.0

View Download

Explore Further

Read more research from the creator(s):

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work from this publication: