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Climate drivers of hospitalizations for mycoses in Brazil.

Fabrício Brito SilvaJessflan Rafael Nascimento SantosLetícia Chagas da SilvaWolia Costa GomesPaulo Cesar Mendes VillisEliane Dos Santos GomesEdilene de Araújo Diniz PinheiroConceição de Maria Pedrozo E Silva de AzevedoRosane da Silva DiasCristina de Andrade MonteiroJulliana Ribeiro Alves Santos
Published in: Scientific reports (2019)
Climate can modulate human health at large spatial scales, but the influence of global, regional, and local environments remains poorly understood, especially for neglected diseases, such as mycoses. In this work, we present the correlation between climatic variables and hospitalizations for mycoses in Brazilian state capitals, evaluating the period of 2008 to 2016 at different time scales. The results indicate that climate modulates the hospitalizations for mycoses differently at annual and monthly time scales, with minimum temperature as a key climatic variable during periods of high prevalence in the 10 Brazilian capitals with the highest hospitalizations for mycoses rates. The greatest number of hospitalizations coincided with La Niña events, while a reduction was observed during El Niño events, thereby demonstrating the influence of the Pacific Interdecadal Climate Oscillation on the prevalence of mycoses in Brazil. At a regional scale, the mycoses burden in Brazil appears to respond differently to local and global climatic drivers.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • risk factors
  • risk assessment
  • high frequency