SPATIAL PATTERN DISTRIBUTION OF DENGUE FEVER IN SUB-URBAN AREA USING GIS TOOLS

Masnita Md Yusof, Nazri Che Dom, Ariza Zainuddin

Abstract


Dengue fever (DF) is one of the major public health problems in
Malaysia. The number of cases recorded is always fluctuating.
The aim of the study is to identify the high-risk area for the
occurrence of dengue disease. Spatial-temporal model was used
by measuring three characteristics which are frequency,
duration and intensity to define the severity and magnitude of
outbreak transmission. This study examined a total of 386
registered dengue fever cases, geo-coded by address in Jempol
district between January 2011 and December 2015. Even though
case notification figures are subjected to bias, this information is
available in the health services. It may lead to crucial
conclusion, recommendations, and hypotheses. Public health
officials can utilize the temporal risk indices to describe dengue
relatively than relying on the traditional case incident figures.

 


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