期刊论文详细信息
Japanese journal of infectious diseases
Population Size Dependency of Measles Epidemic That Was Scalable from Japanese Prefectures to European Countries
Hiroshi Yoshikura1 
[1] National Institute of Infectious Diseases
关键词: measles elimination;    population size;    Zipf plot;    infant mortality and GDP;    EU countries;   
DOI  :  10.7883/yoken.JJID.2018.023
学科分类:传染病学
来源: National Institute of Infectious Diseases
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【 摘 要 】

The relationship between the number of measles patients (y) and the population size (x) was expressed by the equation y=axs, where a is a constant and s the slope of the plot; s was 2.04–2.17 for prefectures in Japan, i.e., the number of patients was proportional to the square of the population size of the prefecture. For European countries that joined the European Union (EU) no later than 2009, the slope was 1.43–1.87. The population dependency of measles found among prefectures in Japan was thus scalable to European countries. This was surprising because, unlike Japan, the population densities of EU countries were not uniform and not proportional to the population size. The population size dependency was not observed among Western Pacific and South-East Asian countries probably due to confounding from interacting socioeconomic factors. The correlation between measles incidence and birth rate, infant mortality or gross domestic product per capita was almost insignificant. The size distribution of local infection clusters (LICs) of measles and rubella in Japan followed a power law. For measles, although the population dependency remained unchanged after “elimination,” there were changes in the Zipf-type plots of LIC sizes. After “elimination,” LICs linked to importation-related outbreaks in less populated prefectures emerged as the top-ranked LICs.

【 授权许可】

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