The effects of climate variability and seasonal influence on diarrhoeal disease in the tropical city-state of Singapore – A time-series analysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2020.113517Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Relative humidity was positively associated with the risk of diarrhoea.

  • Seasonality was a major determinant of diarrhoea.

  • Public and school holidays were associated with diarrhoea reports.

  • Annual trimodal illness peaks suggest the importance of timing mitigation measures.

  • Mitigation measures must include food safety and primary healthcare resource plans.

Abstract

Background

Diarrhoeal disease is common and imposes substantial health and economic burdens across the globe, especially in the African and Southeast Asian regions. Besides causing high mortality and morbidity, diarrhoeal disease has also been associated with growth and cognitive shortfalls in children in low-resource settings. Extreme weather events brought about by climate change may increase diarrhoeal disease and impact vulnerable populations in countries regardless of levels of development. We examined the seasonal and climatic influences of acute diarrhoeal disease reports in Singapore, a city-state located in Southeast Asia.

Methods

We used a time-series analysis, adjusting for time-varying potential confounders in a negative binomial regression model and fitting fractional polynomials to investigate the relationship between climatic factors (temperature, relative humidity and rainfall) and reported diarrhoeal disease.

Results

We included 1,798,198 reports of diarrhoeal disease from 2005 to 2018. We observed annual trimodal peaks in the number of reports. Every 10% increase in relative humidity in the present week was positively associated with an increase in reports one week later [Incidence Rate Ratio (IRR): 1.030, 95% CI 1.004–1.057] and negatively associated with a decrease in reports six weeks later (IRR: 0.979, 95% CI 0.961–0.997). We observed effect modification of relative humidity on the risk of diarrhoeal disease in the first calendar quarter (January to March). There was weak evidence of a delayed effect of ambient air temperature on reports of diarrhoeal disease one week later (IRR: 1.013, 95% CI 0.998–1.027). No threshold effects of climatic factors were observed. Each week of school holidays was associated with a 14.4% reduction in diarrhoeal disease reports (IRR: 0.856, 95% CI: 0.840 to 0.871). Public holidays were associated with a reduction in reports in the same week and an increase a week later.

Conclusions

Diarrhoeal disease is highly seasonal and is associated with climate variability. Food safety and primary healthcare resource mitigation could be timed in anticipation of seasonal and climate driven increases in disease reports.

Keywords

Diarrhoea
Time-series
Singapore
Climate variability
Tropics

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