PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Precipitation increases the occurrence of sporadic legionnaires' disease in Taiwan.

  • Nai-Tzu Chen,
  • Mu-Jean Chen,
  • Chao-Yu Guo,
  • Kow-Tong Chen,
  • Huey-Jen Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114337
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
p. e114337

Abstract

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Legionnaires' disease (LD) is an acute form of pneumonia, and changing weather is considered a plausible risk factor. Yet, the relationship between weather and LD has rarely been investigated, especially using long-term daily data. In this study, daily data was used to evaluate the impacts of precipitation, temperature, and relative humidity on LD occurrence in Taiwan from 1995-2011. A time-stratified 2:1 matched-period case-crossover design was used to compare each case with self-controlled data using a conditional logistic regression analysis, and odds ratios (ORs) for LD occurrence was estimated. The city, gender and age were defined as a stratum for each matched set to modify the effects. For lag day- 0 to 15, the precipitation at lag day-11 significantly affected LD occurrence (p0.05). In conclusion, in warm, humid regions, an increase of daily precipitation is likely to be a critical weather factor triggering LD occurrence where the risk is found particularly significant at an 11-day lag. Additionally, precipitation at 21-40 and 61-80 mm might make LD occurrence more likely.