Combining mosquito vector and human disease data for improved assessment of spatial west Nile virus disease risk

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Abstract

Assessments of spatial risk of exposure to vector-borne pathogens that combine vector and human disease data are needed for areas encompassing large tracts of public land with low population bases. We addressed this need for West Nile virus (WNV) disease in the northern Colorado Front Range by developing not only a spatial model for entomological risk of exposure to Culex tarsalis WNV vectors and an epidemiological risk map for WNV disease but also a novel risk-classification index combining data for these independently derived measures of entomological and epidemiological risk. Risk of vector exposure was high in the densely populated eastern plains portion of the Front Range but low in cooler montane areas to the west that are sparsely populated but used heavily for recreation in the summer. The entomological risk model performed well when applied to the western, mountainous part of Colorado and validated against epidemiologic data. Copyright © 2008 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

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Winters, A. M., Bolling, B. G., Beaty, B. J., Blair, C. D., Eisen, R. J., Meyer, A. M., … Eisen, L. (2008). Combining mosquito vector and human disease data for improved assessment of spatial west Nile virus disease risk. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 78(4), 654–665. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.2008.78.654

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