Health at the sub-catchment scale: Typhoid and its environmental determinants in central division, Fiji
Authors
Aaron P. Jenkins, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Stacy D. Jupiter, Wildlife Conservation Society, Melanesia Program, Suva, Fiji
Ute A. Mueller, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Adam W. Jenney, Colonial War Memorial Hospital, Suva, Fiji
Gandercillar Vosaki, Wildlife Conservation Society, Suva, Fiji
Varanisese Rosa, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne
Alanieta Naucukidi, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne
Kim Mulholland, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London
Richard A. Strugnell, University of Melbourne
Mike Kama, Fiji Ministry of Health and Medical Services
Pierre Horwitz, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
EcoHealth
Publisher
Springer
Place of Publication
United States
School
School of Science
RAS ID
23205
Abstract
The impact of environmental change on transmission patterns of waterborne enteric diseases is a major public health concern. This study concerns the burden and spatial nature of enteric fever, attributable to Salmonella Typhi infection in the Central Division, Republic of Fiji at a sub-catchment scale over 30-months (2013–2015). Quantitative spatial analysis suggested relationships between environmental conditions of sub-catchments and incidence and recurrence of typhoid fever. Average incidence per inhabited sub-catchment for the Central Division was high at 205.9/100,000, with cases recurring in each calendar year in 26% of sub-catchments. Although the numbers of cases were highest within dense, urban coastal sub-catchments, the incidence was highest in low-density mountainous rural areas. Significant environmental determinants at this scale suggest increased risk of exposure where sediment yields increase following runoff. The study suggests that populations living on large systems that broaden into meandering mid-reaches and floodplains with alluvial deposition are at a greater risk compared to small populations living near small, erosional, high-energy headwaters and small streams unconnected to large hydrological networks. This study suggests that anthropogenic alteration of land cover and hydrology (particularly via fragmentation of riparian forest and connectivity between road and river networks) facilitates increased transmission of typhoid fever and that environmental transmission of typhoid fever is important in Fiji. © 2016, International Association for Ecology and Health.
DOI
10.1007/s10393-016-1152-6
Related Publications
Jenkins, A. (2017). A nested environmental approach to typhoid epidemiology in Central Division, Fiji. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/1992
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Comments
Jenkins, A. P., Jupiter, S., Mueller, U., Jenney, A., Vosaki, G., Rosa, V., . . . Horwitz, P. (2016). Health at the sub-catchment scale: Typhoid and its environmental determinants in central division, Fiji. EcoHealth, 13(4), 633-651. Available here.