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West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis

Xiaoying Xu et al · BMC · 2025

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Abstract Objectives To analyze spatiotemporal clustering patterns of severe hand foot and mouth disease (HFMD) in children aged ≤ 5 years, quantify the associations between meteorological factors and severe HFMD incidence, and evaluate incidence shifts associated with the COVID-19 pandemic in Shandong Province, China, during 2013–2023. Methods Spatial autocorrelation analysis (Moran’s I) and spatiotemporal cluster detection (SaTScan) identified high-risk zones. Generalized additive models (GAM) assessed nonlinear associations between meteorological factors (temperature, humidity, precipitation) and severe HFMD incidence. QGIS visualized geographic patterns. Results Among 763,191 HFMD cases (17,212 severe, 2.32%), annual incidence declined from 121.70/100,000 (2014) to 15.81/100,000 (2022) during COVID-19, with partial resurgence in 2023 (46.63/100,000). Severe cases exhibited significant spatial clustering (Moran’s I = 0.219–0.415; p ≤ 0.05) with westward-to-eastward high-risk cluster migration. Seasonal peaks (April–September) showed 62%–79% reductions post-2021 (p < 0.01). Temperature (ρ = 0.689, p < 0.01) and humidity (optimal threshold: 55%–60%, EDF = 2.43, p = 0.023) were the factors most strongly associated with incidence, supported by GAM: near-linear temperature effects (EDF = 1.41, p < 0.001), precipitation saturation (> 20 mm/week, EDF = 1.24, p = 0.045), and persistent seasonality (EDF = 4.02, p < 0.001). Conclusions Severe HFMD epidemiology in Shandong is jointly influenced by meteorological factors (nonlinear humidity effects) and spatiotemporal dynamics, with west-to-east transmission patterns and post-pandemic behavioral-environmental interactions. Targeted vaccination and climate-adaptive surveillance during April–September peaks in identified clusters are critical for mitigation.

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APA 7

al, X. X. E. (2025). West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25994-x

MLA

al, Xiaoying Xu et. "West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis." 2025. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25994-x.

Chicago

al, Xiaoying Xu et. 2025. "West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis.". https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25994-x.

Harvard

al, X. X. E. 2025, West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis, BMC, available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25994-x [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

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Título
West-to-East transmission clusters and meteorological associations for severe hand foot and mouth disease in Shandong Province: a geospatial and GAM analysis
Autor / colaboradores
Xiaoying Xu et al
Editorial
BMC
Año de publicación
2025
ISSN
1471-2458
ISSN
1471-2458
Idioma
eng

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