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DOI10.1289/EHP3711
Associations between High Temperature, Heavy Rainfall, and Diarrhea among Young Children in Rural Tamil Nadu, India: A Prospective Cohort Study
Mertens, Andrew1; Balakrishnan, Kalpana2; Ramaswamy, Padmavathi2; Rajkumar, Paramasivan2; Ramaprabha, Prabhakar2; Durairaj, Natesan2; Hubbard, Alan E.1; Khush, Ranjiv3; Colford, John M., Jr.1; Arnold, Benjamin F.1
发表日期2019
ISSN0091-6765
EISSN1552-9924
卷号127期号:4
英文摘要

BACKGROUND: The effects of weather on diarrhea could influence the health impacts of climate change. Children have the highest diarrhea incidence, especially in India, where many lack safe water and sanitation.


OBJECTIVES: In a prospective cohort of 1,284 children under 5 y of age from 900 households across 25 villages in rural Tamil Nadu, India, we examined whether high temperature and heavy rainfall was associated with increased all-cause diarrhea and water contamination.


METHODS: Seven-day prevalence of diarrhea was assessed monthly for up to 12 visits from January 2008 to April 2009, and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) presence in drinking water, a fecal contamination indicator, was tested in a subset of households. We estimated associations between temperature and rainfall exposures and diarrhea and H2S using binomial regressions, adjusting for potential 'confounders, random effects for village, and autoregressive-1 error terms for study week.


RESULTS: There were 259 cases of diarrhea. The prevalence of diarrhea during the 7 d before visits was 2.95 times higher (95% CI: 1.99, 4.39) when mean temperature in the week before the 7-d recall was in the hottest versus the coolest quartile of weekly mean temperature during 1 December 2007 to 15 April 2009. Diarrhea prevalence was 1.50 times higher when the 3 weeks before the diarrhea recall period included >1 d (vs. 0 d) with rainfall of >16.82 mm (95% CI: 1.12, 2.02), and 2.60 times higher (95% CI: 1.55, 4.36) for heavy rain weeks following a 60-d dry period. The H2S prevalence in household water was not associated with heavy rain prior to sample collection.


CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that, in rural Tamil Nadu, heavy rainfall may wash pathogens that accumulate during dry weather into child contact. Higher temperatures were positively associated with diarrhea 1-3 weeks later. Our findings suggest that diarrhea morbidity could worsen under climate change without interventions to reduce enteric pathogen transmission through multiple pathways.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health ; Toxicology
来源期刊ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/95493
作者单位1.Univ Calif Berkeley, Sch Publ Hlth, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA;
2.Sri Ramachandra Med Coll & Res Inst, Dept Environm & Hlth Engn, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India;
3.Aquaya Inst, San Francisco, CA USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Mertens, Andrew,Balakrishnan, Kalpana,Ramaswamy, Padmavathi,et al. Associations between High Temperature, Heavy Rainfall, and Diarrhea among Young Children in Rural Tamil Nadu, India: A Prospective Cohort Study[J],2019,127(4).
APA Mertens, Andrew.,Balakrishnan, Kalpana.,Ramaswamy, Padmavathi.,Rajkumar, Paramasivan.,Ramaprabha, Prabhakar.,...&Arnold, Benjamin F..(2019).Associations between High Temperature, Heavy Rainfall, and Diarrhea among Young Children in Rural Tamil Nadu, India: A Prospective Cohort Study.ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES,127(4).
MLA Mertens, Andrew,et al."Associations between High Temperature, Heavy Rainfall, and Diarrhea among Young Children in Rural Tamil Nadu, India: A Prospective Cohort Study".ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES 127.4(2019).
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