Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona

The goal of this dissertation is to characterize the distribution and determinants of coccidioidomycosis in greater Tucson, Arizona, using landscape ecology and complex survey methods to control for environmental factors that affect <italic>Coccidioides</italic> exposure. Notifiable cocc...

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Main Author: Tabor, Joseph Anthony
Other Authors: O'Rourke, Mary Kay
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194922
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1949222015-10-23T04:41:45Z Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona Tabor, Joseph Anthony O'Rourke, Mary Kay O'Rourke, Mary K Harris, Robin Sterling, Charles capture-recapture complex survey multiple imputation population control adjustment valley fever The goal of this dissertation is to characterize the distribution and determinants of coccidioidomycosis in greater Tucson, Arizona, using landscape ecology and complex survey methods to control for environmental factors that affect <italic>Coccidioides</italic> exposure. Notifiable coccidioidomycosis cases reported to the health department in Arizona have dramatically increased since 1997 and indicate a potential epidemic of unknown causes. Epidemic determination is confounded by concurrent changes in notifiable disease reporting-compliance, misdiagnosis, and changing demographics of susceptible populations. A stratified, two-stage, address-based telephone survey of greater Tucson, Arizona, was conducted in 2002 and 2003. Subjects were recruited from direct marketing data by census block groups and landscape strata as determined using a geographic information system (GIS). Subjects were interviewed about potential risk factors. Address-level state health department notifiable-disease surveillance data were compared with self-reported survey data to estimate the true disease frequency.Comparing state surveillance data with the survey data, no coccidioidomycosis epidemic was detectable from 1992 to 2006 after adjusting surveillance data for reporting compliance. State health department surveillance reported only 20% of the probable reportable cases in 2001.Utilizing survey data and geographic coding, it was observed that spatial and temporal disease frequency was highly variable at the census block-group scale and indicates that localized soil disturbance events are a major group-level risk factor. Poststratification by 2000 census demographic data adjusted for selection bias into the survey and response rate. Being Hispanic showed similar odds ratio of self-reporting coccidioidomycosis diagnosis as of being non-Hispanic White race-ethnicity when controlled by other risk factors. Cigarette smoking in the home and having a home located in the low Hispanic foothills and low Hispanic riparian strata were associated with elevated risk of odds ratios for coccidioidomycosis. Sample stratification by landscape and demographics controlled for differential classification of susceptibility and exposures between strata.Clustered, address-based telephone surveys provide a feasible and valid method to recruit populations from address-based lists by using a GIS to design a survey and population survey statistical methods for the analysis. Notifiable coccidioidomycosis case surveillance can be improved by including reporting compliance in the analysis. Pathogen exposures and host susceptibility are important predictable group-level determinants of coccidioidomycosis that were controlled by stratified sampling using a landscape ecology approach. 2009 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194922 659751909 10323 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic capture-recapture
complex survey
multiple imputation
population control adjustment
valley fever
spellingShingle capture-recapture
complex survey
multiple imputation
population control adjustment
valley fever
Tabor, Joseph Anthony
Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
description The goal of this dissertation is to characterize the distribution and determinants of coccidioidomycosis in greater Tucson, Arizona, using landscape ecology and complex survey methods to control for environmental factors that affect <italic>Coccidioides</italic> exposure. Notifiable coccidioidomycosis cases reported to the health department in Arizona have dramatically increased since 1997 and indicate a potential epidemic of unknown causes. Epidemic determination is confounded by concurrent changes in notifiable disease reporting-compliance, misdiagnosis, and changing demographics of susceptible populations. A stratified, two-stage, address-based telephone survey of greater Tucson, Arizona, was conducted in 2002 and 2003. Subjects were recruited from direct marketing data by census block groups and landscape strata as determined using a geographic information system (GIS). Subjects were interviewed about potential risk factors. Address-level state health department notifiable-disease surveillance data were compared with self-reported survey data to estimate the true disease frequency.Comparing state surveillance data with the survey data, no coccidioidomycosis epidemic was detectable from 1992 to 2006 after adjusting surveillance data for reporting compliance. State health department surveillance reported only 20% of the probable reportable cases in 2001.Utilizing survey data and geographic coding, it was observed that spatial and temporal disease frequency was highly variable at the census block-group scale and indicates that localized soil disturbance events are a major group-level risk factor. Poststratification by 2000 census demographic data adjusted for selection bias into the survey and response rate. Being Hispanic showed similar odds ratio of self-reporting coccidioidomycosis diagnosis as of being non-Hispanic White race-ethnicity when controlled by other risk factors. Cigarette smoking in the home and having a home located in the low Hispanic foothills and low Hispanic riparian strata were associated with elevated risk of odds ratios for coccidioidomycosis. Sample stratification by landscape and demographics controlled for differential classification of susceptibility and exposures between strata.Clustered, address-based telephone surveys provide a feasible and valid method to recruit populations from address-based lists by using a GIS to design a survey and population survey statistical methods for the analysis. Notifiable coccidioidomycosis case surveillance can be improved by including reporting compliance in the analysis. Pathogen exposures and host susceptibility are important predictable group-level determinants of coccidioidomycosis that were controlled by stratified sampling using a landscape ecology approach.
author2 O'Rourke, Mary Kay
author_facet O'Rourke, Mary Kay
Tabor, Joseph Anthony
author Tabor, Joseph Anthony
author_sort Tabor, Joseph Anthony
title Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
title_short Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
title_full Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
title_fullStr Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiological Study of Coccidioidomycosis in Greater Tucson, Arizona
title_sort epidemiological study of coccidioidomycosis in greater tucson, arizona
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194922
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