Global and regional burden of chikungunya from 2004 to 2024: a worldwide observational study
Sijia Wang, Yutong Liu, Yaping Wang, Liyan Zhou, Jue Liu

TL;DR
This study tracks the global rise of chikungunya from 2004 to 2024, showing how climate and socioeconomic factors influence its spread.
Contribution
The study provides the first comprehensive global analysis of chikungunya incidence and its association with environmental and socioeconomic factors.
Findings
Chikungunya incidence increased globally, with the Americas most affected in 2024.
Temperature, urbanisation, and GDP per capita showed significant nonlinear effects on chikungunya transmission.
The incidence trend declined after adjusting for environmental and socioeconomic factors.
Abstract
Chikungunya has emerged as a growing global health threat with a new sharp rise in outbreaks across 119 countries. However, its transmission patterns remain poorly characterised. We aimed to describe the global burden and spatiotemporal trends of chikungunya, and identify country-level environmental and socioeconomic factors associated with local transmission. We compiled annual country-level autochthonous chikungunya cases from 2004 to 2024, using data from regional surveillance systems and peer-reviewed sources. We calculated the incidence rates using the number of new cases and the population. We employed a generalised additive model (GAM) to flexibly model nonlinear associations between chikungunya incidence and environmental and socioeconomic factors. We performed subgroup analyses across the six WHO regions and conducted multiple sensitivity analyses addressing data structure,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMosquito-borne diseases and control · Malaria Research and Control · Zoonotic diseases and public health
