Published April 6, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The relationship between rising temperatures and malaria incidence in Hainan, China, from 1984 to 2010: A longitudinal cohort study

  • 1. Beijing Normal University
  • 2. Central Theater Center for Disease Control and Prevention of PLA
  • 3. Hainan Center for Disease Control and Prevention
  • 4. University of Lisbon
  • 5. University of Oxford
  • 6. University of Chicago
  • 7. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique et École Normale Supérieure
  • 8. University of Oslo

Description

Background: The influence of rising global temperatures on malaria dynamics and distribution remains controversial, especially in central highland regions. We aimed to address this subject by studying the spatiotemporal heterogeneity of malaria and the effect of climate change on malaria transmission over 27 years in Hainan, an island province in China.

Methods: For this longitudinal cohort study, we used a decades-long dataset of malaria incidence reports from Hainan, China, to investigate the pattern of malaria transmission in Hainan relative to temperature and the incidence at increasing altitudes. Climatic data were obtained from the local meteorological stations in Hainan during 1984–2010 and the WorldClim dataset. A temperature-dependent R0 model and negative binomial generalised linear model were used to decipher the relationship between climate factors and malaria incidence in the tropical region.

Findings: Over the past few decades, the annual peak incidence has appeared earlier in the central highland regions but later in low-altitude regions in Hainan, China. Results from the temperature-dependent model showed that these long-term changes of incidence peak timing are linked to rising temperatures (of about 1·5°C). Further, a 1°C increase corresponds to a change in cases of malaria from –5·6% (95% CI –4·5 to –6·6) to –9·2% (95% CI –7·6 to –10·9) from the northern plain regions to the central highland regions during the rainy season. In the dry season, the change in cases would be 4·6% (95% CI 3·7 to 5·5) to 11·9% (95% CI 9·8 to 14·2) from low-altitude areas to high-altitude areas.

Interpretation: Our study empirically supports the idea that increasing temperatures can generate opposing effects on malaria dynamics for lowland and highland regions. This should be further investigated and incorporated into future modelling, disease burden calculations, and malaria control, with attention for central highland regions under climate change.

Data availability

All data used in this study are provided in the Article or appendix, and from the authors on request. The code is available at https://github.com/wangzengmiao/Malaria-Hainan.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/S2542-5196(22)00039-0
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5327

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China
82073616
Beijing Natural Science Foundation
JQ18025
National Key Research and Development Program of China
Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program by CAST
2018QNRC001
Research on Key Technologies of Plague Prevention and Control in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region
2021ZD0006
Beijing Advanced Innovation Program for Land Surface Science
110631111
National Natural Science Foundation of China
81460520
Scientific and Technological Innovation 2030
Major Project of New Generation Artificial Intelligence
Oxford Martin School
Universoty of Oxford

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution