Influence of climate and heatwaves on dengue transmission in Sao Paulo and Natal, Brazil
Camila Lorenz, Rita Yuri Ynoue, Adriana Gioda, Thiago Nogueira

TL;DR
This study examines how climate and heatwaves affect dengue transmission in two Brazilian cities, finding that extreme heat can reduce dengue risk in some areas.
Contribution
The study reveals location-specific effects of heatwaves on dengue, challenging assumptions about climate's uniform impact on vector-borne diseases.
Findings
Higher minimum temperatures were associated with increased dengue risk in both São Paulo and Natal.
Heatwaves in São Paulo were linked to a 70% reduction in dengue risk in subsequent weeks.
Natal showed no significant association between heatwaves and dengue cases.
Abstract
Dengue fever, a mosquito-borne viral disease, poses a significant public health challenge whose transmission dynamics are highly sensitive to climatic conditions. However, the effects of extreme weather events like heatwaves remain poorly understood. This study investigated the influence of climatic factors and heatwaves on dengue incidence in two key Brazilian hotspots: the subtropical megacity of São Paulo (Sao Paulo State) and the tropical coastal city of Natal (Rio Grande do Norte State). We analyzed weekly confirmed dengue cases and meteorological data (temperature, precipitation, heatwaves) from 2014 to 2023. Distributed lag non-linear models and negative binomial regression were used to assess the complex, delayed associations between meteorological variables and dengue infections. Over the study period, 149,468 dengue cases were reported in São Paulo and 80,999 in Natal.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMosquito-borne diseases and control · Malaria Research and Control · Viral Infections and Vectors
