BMC Medicine | |
Regional-based within-year seasonal variations in influenza-related health outcomes across mainland China: a systematic review and spatio-temporal analysis | |
Billy J. Quilty1  Marc Baguelin1  Fiona Yueqian Sun1  Charlie Diamond1  Mark Jit1  W. John Edmunds1  Yang Liu1  Juan Yang2  Hui Gong2  Hongjie Yu2  | |
[1] Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Centre for Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine;School of Public Health, Fudan University, Key Laboratory of Public Health Safety, Ministry of Education; | |
关键词: China; Influenza; Seasonality; Systematic review; Spatio-temporal; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12916-022-02269-5 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Abstract Background China experiences large variations in influenza seasonal activity. We aim to update and improve the current understanding of regional-based within-year variations of influenza activity across mainland China to provide evidence for the planning and optimisation of healthcare strategies. Methods We conducted a systematic review and spatio-temporal meta-analysis to assess regional-based within-year variations of ILI outpatient consultation rates, influenza test positivity rates amongst both ILI outpatients and SARI inpatients, and influenza-associated excess mortality rates. We searched English and Chinese databases for articles reporting time-series data on the four influenza-related outcomes at the sub-national and sub-annual level. After synthesising the data, we reported on the mean monthly rate, epidemic onset, duration, peak and intensity. Results We included 247 (7.7%) eligible studies in the analysis. We found within-year influenza patterns to vary across mainland China in relation to latitude and geographic location. High-latitude provinces were characterised by having short and intense annual winter epidemics, whilst most mid-latitude and low-latitude provinces experience semi-annual epidemics or year-round activity. Subtype activity varied across the country, with A/H1N1pdm09 and influenza B occurring predominantly in the winter, whereas A/H3N2 activity exhibited a latitudinal divide with high-latitude regions experiencing a winter peak, whilst mid and low-latitude regions experienced a summer epidemic. Epidemic onsets and peaks also varied, occurring first in the north and later in the southeast. We found positive associations between all influenza health outcomes. In addition, seasonal patterns at the prefecture and county-level broadly resembled their wider province. Conclusions This is the first systematic review to simultaneously examine the seasonal variation of multiple influenza-related health outcomes at multiple spatial scales across mainland China. The seasonality information provided here has important implications for the planning and optimisation of immunisation programmes and healthcare provision, supporting the need for regional-based approaches to address variations in local epidemiology.
【 授权许可】
Unknown