Dengue spatiotemporal dynamics in the Federal District, Brazil: occurrence and permanence of epidemics

Bruna Drumond Jussara Ângelo Diego Ricardo Xavier Rafael Catão Helen Gurgel Christovam Barcellos About the authors

Abstract

The specific characteristics of the Federal District (DF) favor the introduction, reproduction, dissemination, and permanence of dengue vector and viruses. Here, we aimed to analyze the spatiotemporal patterns of dengue epidemics in the Administrative Regions (RAs) of the DF from January 2007 to December 2017. We used Fourier partial series model to obtain a seasonal signature of the time series, which allowed calculating indicators of permanence (number of epidemic years, number of epidemic months per year, the proportion of epidemic months for the period) and time/moment of epidemics (month of epidemic peak). A total of 82 epidemics were recorded in this period. The RAs with the largest number of epidemic years were Varjão (5 epidemics), Gama, Lago Sul, and Sobradinho (4 epidemics). These last three RAs also had the highest proportions of epidemic months of the entire study period (9 epidemic months). The RAs with urban centrality function had an earlier epidemic peak than the others, in February and March. Epidemics showed high permanence values in RAs with different types of occupations, emphasizing the need to consider the social organization of space processes in dengue distribution studies.

Key words
Dengue; Spatiotemporal analysis; Urban areas; Epidemics

Introduction

Dengue is still an important public health problem. The predominant transmission cycle of this endemic disease in cities leads to intricate issues related to urbanization, population mobility, and globalization11 Czeresnia D, Ribeiro AM. O conceito de espaço em epidemiologia: uma interpretação histórica e epistemológica. Cad Saude Publica 2000; 16(3):595-605.,22 Gubler DJ. Dengue, Urbanization and Globalization: The Unholy Trinity of the 21(st) Century. Trop Med Health. 2011; 39(4 Supl.):3-11.. It is present in tropical and subtropical areas of the globe, and around 390 million people are estimated to be infected with the four dengue serotypes each year. Although, only 96 million are symptomatic33 Bhatt S, Gething PW, Brady OJ, Messina JP, Farlow AW, Moyes CL, Drake JM, Brownstein JS, Hoen AG, Sankoh O, Myers MF, George DB, Jaenisch T, Wint GR, Simmons CP, Scott TW, Farrar JJ, Hay SI. The global distribution and burden of dengue. Nature 2013; 496(7446):504-507..

Major epidemics occurred worldwide in 2016. More than 2.38 million cases have been reported in the Americas region, with about 1.5 million cases only in Brazil44 World Health Organization (WHO). Dengue and severe dengue. WHO Fact Sheet dengue and severe dengue. Geneva: WHO; 2020.. Dengue fever re-emerged in the Brazil in the 1980s and has spread to almost the entire country, which has experienced countless epidemics. Currently, the four serotypes of the disease circulate in the country, establishing a scenario of hyperendemicity in several cities55 Catão R, Guimarães R. Mapeamento da reemergência do dengue no Brasil-1981/82-2008. Hygeia 2011; 7(13):173-185.,66 Brasil. Ministério da Saúde (MS). Dengue. Descrição da Doença. 2018. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: http://portalms.saude.gov.br/saude-de-a-z/dengue/descricao-da-doenca
http://portalms.saude.gov.br/saude-de-a-...
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An increasing number of studies on the spatiotemporal distribution of dengue in Brazilian cities and its relationship with socioeconomic and environmental conditions77 Flauzino RF, Souza-Santos R, Oliveira RM. Dengue, geoprocessamento e indicadores socioeconômicos e ambientais: um estudo de revisão. Rev Panam Salud Pública 2009; 25(5):456-461.

8 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946.

9 Costa Resendes AP, Silveira NAPR, Sabroza PC, Souza-Santos R. Determinação de áreas prioritárias para ações de controle da dengue. Rev Saude Publica 2010; 44(2):274-282.

10 Cordeiro R, Donalisio MR, Andrade VR, Mafra AC, Nucci LB, Brown JC, Stephan C. Spatial distribution of the risk of dengue fever in southeast Brazil, 2006-2007. BMC Public Health. 2011; 11:355.
-1111 Souza LS, Barata RDCB. Diferenciais intraurbanos na distribuição de dengue em Cuiabá, 2007 e 2008 Intra-urbandiferentials in dengue distribution , Cuiabá , 2007-2008. Rev Bras Epidemiol 2012; 15(4):761-770. have been conducted. The spatial heterogeneity of living conditions usually emerges as an essential factor in explaining the distribution of this endemic disease77 Flauzino RF, Souza-Santos R, Oliveira RM. Dengue, geoprocessamento e indicadores socioeconômicos e ambientais: um estudo de revisão. Rev Panam Salud Pública 2009; 25(5):456-461.,99 Costa Resendes AP, Silveira NAPR, Sabroza PC, Souza-Santos R. Determinação de áreas prioritárias para ações de controle da dengue. Rev Saude Publica 2010; 44(2):274-282.,1111 Souza LS, Barata RDCB. Diferenciais intraurbanos na distribuição de dengue em Cuiabá, 2007 e 2008 Intra-urbandiferentials in dengue distribution , Cuiabá , 2007-2008. Rev Bras Epidemiol 2012; 15(4):761-770.. Factors such as sanitation conditions, presence of slums, income, the proportion of children and older adults, population immunity, demographic and household density are frequently evaluated in these studies as they characterize the required conditions for the reproduction and maintenance of the vector and the virus22 Gubler DJ. Dengue, Urbanization and Globalization: The Unholy Trinity of the 21(st) Century. Trop Med Health. 2011; 39(4 Supl.):3-11.,77 Flauzino RF, Souza-Santos R, Oliveira RM. Dengue, geoprocessamento e indicadores socioeconômicos e ambientais: um estudo de revisão. Rev Panam Salud Pública 2009; 25(5):456-461.

8 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946.

9 Costa Resendes AP, Silveira NAPR, Sabroza PC, Souza-Santos R. Determinação de áreas prioritárias para ações de controle da dengue. Rev Saude Publica 2010; 44(2):274-282.

10 Cordeiro R, Donalisio MR, Andrade VR, Mafra AC, Nucci LB, Brown JC, Stephan C. Spatial distribution of the risk of dengue fever in southeast Brazil, 2006-2007. BMC Public Health. 2011; 11:355.
-1111 Souza LS, Barata RDCB. Diferenciais intraurbanos na distribuição de dengue em Cuiabá, 2007 e 2008 Intra-urbandiferentials in dengue distribution , Cuiabá , 2007-2008. Rev Bras Epidemiol 2012; 15(4):761-770..

San Pedro et al.88 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946. found a high incidence of dengue in low, medium and high-income areas with different water storage practices in Região Oceânica de Niterói, emphasizing the need to consider the space organization processes that favor the production of this arbovirus. Xavier et al.1212 Xavier DR, Magalhães MAFM, Gracie R, Reis IC, Matos VP, Barcellos C. Difusão espaço-tempo do dengue no Município do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, no período de 2000-2013. Cad Saude Publica 2017; 33(2):e00186615. accounted for 495 epidemic dengue peaks in the period from 2000 to 2013 in the neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro. These authors also identified neighborhoods with the highest permanence of epidemics and discussed the characteristics and processes of the organization of urban space that explained the process of spreading of the disease.

The introduction of dengue in Brasilia is relatively recent, despite its central role as the Brazilian capital. The first autochthonous cases of dengue in the Federal District (DF) occurred only in 1997, and the first epidemic was registered in 2002, with 2,200 cases1313 Catão RDC, Guimarães RF, Abílio O, Júnior DC, Trancoso RA. Análise Da Distribuição Do Dengue No Distrito Federal. Espaço e Geogr 2009; 12(1):81-103.. Currently, dengue remains endemic in the DF, with new cases recorded every month of the year1414 Silveira BD, Siqueira R, Gurgel H, Ramalho WM. Dengue e desigualdades socioespaciais no Distrito Federal, Brasil (2007-2014). Dourados: UFGD; 2017., despite its altitude of 1,000 meters above sea level and its dry winter.

Brasília hosts one of the largest and main international airports in the country. Moreover, the city also exhibits high population numbers and demographic density. It should also be noted that, in recent years, Brasília has experienced water rationing and supply difficulties1515 Distrito Federal. Resolução no 20, de 7 de novembro de 2016. Declara o estado de restrição de uso dos recursos hídricos, estabelece o regime de racionamento do serviço de abastecimento de água nas localidades atendidas pelos reservatórios do Descoberto e Santa Maria e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial do Distrito Federal 2016; 7 nov., which favors the introduction, reproduction, and permanence of dengue’s vector and viruses.

It is known that the spatial distribution of incidence rates and dengue cases in DF does not occur homogeneously1313 Catão RDC, Guimarães RF, Abílio O, Júnior DC, Trancoso RA. Análise Da Distribuição Do Dengue No Distrito Federal. Espaço e Geogr 2009; 12(1):81-103.,1414 Silveira BD, Siqueira R, Gurgel H, Ramalho WM. Dengue e desigualdades socioespaciais no Distrito Federal, Brasil (2007-2014). Dourados: UFGD; 2017.. However, few studies were conducted in this urban space1313 Catão RDC, Guimarães RF, Abílio O, Júnior DC, Trancoso RA. Análise Da Distribuição Do Dengue No Distrito Federal. Espaço e Geogr 2009; 12(1):81-103.,1414 Silveira BD, Siqueira R, Gurgel H, Ramalho WM. Dengue e desigualdades socioespaciais no Distrito Federal, Brasil (2007-2014). Dourados: UFGD; 2017.,1616 Siqueira RV, Gurgel HC, Silveira BD, Ramalho WM. Relações entre a dinâmica ambiental e a dengue no Distrito Federal, Brasil. Rev Bras Geogr Médica e da Saúde - Hygeia 2017; 13(26):1980-1726.,1717 Gregório L. Relações entre a dinâmica espaço-temporal da dengue e os padrões urbanos no Distrito Federal, Brasil [tese]. Brasília: UnB; 2018.. The Federal Capital has a polynucleated and fragmented urban space1818 Paviani A. Geografia Urbana do Distrito Federal: Evolução e Tendências. Espaço e Geogr 2007; 10(1):1-22.

19 Ferreira ICB. O processo de urbanização e a produção do espaço metropolitano de Brasília. In: Paviani A, organizador. Brasília, Ideologia e Realidade: Espaço Urbano Em Questão. Brasília: UnB; 2010. p. 61-81.
-2020 Holanda F, Medeiros V, Ribeiro R, Moura A. A configuração da Área Metropolitana de Brasília. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 64-97., with different patterns of land use, income, and sanitation conditions. Furthermore, its urbanization process is marked by irregular land use, by low, medium, or high-income people, in condominiums located in areas that are vulnerable from the environmental, water supply, or historical heritage preservation point of view1818 Paviani A. Geografia Urbana do Distrito Federal: Evolução e Tendências. Espaço e Geogr 2007; 10(1):1-22..

Given this context, in this work we aimed to analyze the spatiotemporal patterns of dengue epidemics in the DF in the 2007-2017 period. We sought to highlight the temporality of the epidemics using indicators of permanence and time/moment of occurrence.

Methods

This is an ecological study with a spatiotemporal approach. Dengue case series in the Federal District (DF) and its 31 Administrative Regions (RAs) from January 2007 to December 2017 were analyzed to identify epidemics and temporal and spatial patterns of transmission of this endemic disease.

The DF is located between the parallels 15º30’ and 16º03’ south latitude and the meridians 47º25’ and 48º12’ west longitude, in the Midwest Region of Brazil. It has an area of 5,783 km2 and borders with municipalities of the States of Goiás and Minas Gerais. Its population was estimated at 2,974,703 inhabitants in 20182121 Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). @cidades. 2019. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: https://cidades.ibge.gov.br/brasil/df/panorama
https://cidades.ibge.gov.br/brasil/df/pa...
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Located in the Planalto Central (Central Plateau), the relief of the DF is characterized by the predominance of plateaus with altitudes that are ranging from 950m and 1,400m2222 Distrito Federal. Atlas Do Distrito Federal 2017. Brasília; 2017. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: http://www.codeplan.df.gov.br/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Atlas-do-Distrito-Federal-2017.pdf.
http://www.codeplan.df.gov.br/wp-content...
. Its climate is marked by strong seasonality, with the dry season in winter and humid in summer. In the dry season, from mid-May to the beginning of September, there is a high temperature range, with warmer days and cooler nights, and low relative air humidity2323 Steinke ET, Steinke VA. Fatores determinantes do período de seca no Distrito Federal. Bol Gaúcho Geogr 2000; 26(1):244-254.. The mean annual temperature is 22ºC, and the accumulated annual precipitation is 1,450mm2424 Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia do Brasil (INMET). Normal Climatológica do Brasil 1981-2010. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: http://www.inmet.gov.br/portal/index.php?r=clima/normaisClimatologicas
http://www.inmet.gov.br/portal/index.php...
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Brasília has particular characteristics for having been a city created to be the capital of the country and for having an urban conformation with specifications of land use. Despite this, the city still has inequalities similar to other Brazilian cities, such as spatial segregation, product of an uneven urbanization process1919 Ferreira ICB. O processo de urbanização e a produção do espaço metropolitano de Brasília. In: Paviani A, organizador. Brasília, Ideologia e Realidade: Espaço Urbano Em Questão. Brasília: UnB; 2010. p. 61-81..

The DF has a single municipality, Brasília. This territory is organized into 31 RAs - one of them also named Brasília (Plano Piloto). The RA is the smallest unit used by planning agencies, also employed in this work as a spatial unit of analysis.

Dengue cases data reported between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2017 were obtained from the Notifiable Diseases Information System (SINAN). Probable cases, confirmed by laboratory or clinical-epidemiological criteria, were considered for analysis, except those discarded due to negative laboratory diagnosis. Besides the discarded data, cases that were imported, those of residents in other federated units, and those without district information or other forms of location, were removed. The data were aggregated by month of the first symptoms and RA of residence. Spatial analyses and mapping of indicators were made considering the occupied area of the RAs obtained at the Geoportal of the State Secretariat for Urban Development and Housing (SEDUH)2525 Distrito Federal S. Infraestrutura de Dados Espaciais - IDE/DF. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: https://www.geoportal.seduh.df.gov.br/mapa/#
https://www.geoportal.seduh.df.gov.br/ma...
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A seasonal signature of the time series of dengue cases was obtained for the DF and each of the 31 RAs. In this model, the time series is broken down into three sine waves with seasonal cycles of 12, 6, and 3 months. These cycles constitute a partial Fourier series, an approach similar to a periodic regression, but which provides trigonometric parameters such as amplitude and phase of the sine waves instead of the regression coefficients of the sine and cosine functions. This approach allows the use of individual parameters of the harmonics themselves to quantify the temporal pattern of epidemics1212 Xavier DR, Magalhães MAFM, Gracie R, Reis IC, Matos VP, Barcellos C. Difusão espaço-tempo do dengue no Município do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, no período de 2000-2013. Cad Saude Publica 2017; 33(2):e00186615.,2626 Alonso WJ, McCormick BJJ. EPIPOI: A user-friendly analytical tool for the extraction and visualization of temporal parameters from epidemiological time series. BMC Public Health 2012; 12:982..The following formula gives the annual periodic seasonality function:

Yt=α0+α1t+α2t2+Y1cos2πt/12+δ1sin2πt/12+Y2cos2πt/6+δ2sin2πt/6+Y3cos2πt/3+δ3sin2πt/3+εt

where Yt is the number of dengue cases in the DF or the RA in time “t”, α0 is the mean number of cases in the DF or by RA, α1t is the linear trend, and α2t2 corresponds to the mathematical function to represent the tendency curve, Y and δ are the regression coefficients of the periodic components (annual, half-yearly and quarterly) and ε(t) is the error term with normal distribution1212 Xavier DR, Magalhães MAFM, Gracie R, Reis IC, Matos VP, Barcellos C. Difusão espaço-tempo do dengue no Município do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, no período de 2000-2013. Cad Saude Publica 2017; 33(2):e00186615.,2626 Alonso WJ, McCormick BJJ. EPIPOI: A user-friendly analytical tool for the extraction and visualization of temporal parameters from epidemiological time series. BMC Public Health 2012; 12:982.,2727 Schuck-paim C, Simonsen L, Miller MA, Moura FE, Fernandes RM, Carvalho ML, Alonso WJ. Were Equatorial Regions Less Affected by the 2009 Influenza Pandemic? The Brazilian Experience 2012; 7(8):e41918..

Two realms were considered to characterize the temporal patterns of dengue epidemics in the RAs: the permanence of the epidemics and the moment of the epidemic peak2828 Barcellos C, Lowe R. Expansion of the dengue transmission area in Brazil: The role of climate and cities. Trop Med Int Heal 2014; 19(2):159-168.,2929 Catão R. Expansão e Consolidação do Complexo Patogênico do Dengue no Estado de São Paulo: Difusão Espacial e Barreiras Geográficas [tese]. Presidente Prudente: UNESP; 2016.. The “permanence” of epidemics was measured by three indicators: number of years with the epidemic, number of epidemic months per year, and proportion of epidemic months in the study period (2007–2017). The first indicator allows verifying the persistence of epidemics over the years, the second allows verifying their intra-annual duration, and the third indicates how long (in months) the period was considered epidemic.

We use the month of the primary peak of the seasonal signature of the time series as the indicator of time (moment). This indicator refers to the month of the maximum disease intensity2626 Alonso WJ, McCormick BJJ. EPIPOI: A user-friendly analytical tool for the extraction and visualization of temporal parameters from epidemiological time series. BMC Public Health 2012; 12:982..

Epidemics are defined as periods in which the absolute number of cases exceeds the expected case threshold, considering the smoothed historical series of cases based on seasonal behavior and annual changes, besides the random component that configures the epidemic situation. Observations within the 95% confidence interval are considered to be random variability. Observations that exceed this interval are considered to be an epidemic period or anomalies1212 Xavier DR, Magalhães MAFM, Gracie R, Reis IC, Matos VP, Barcellos C. Difusão espaço-tempo do dengue no Município do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, no período de 2000-2013. Cad Saude Publica 2017; 33(2):e00186615.,2626 Alonso WJ, McCormick BJJ. EPIPOI: A user-friendly analytical tool for the extraction and visualization of temporal parameters from epidemiological time series. BMC Public Health 2012; 12:982..

The results obtained do not refer, therefore, to incidence rates, but temporality indicators. The use of the absolute number of cases is appropriate for this study since it aims to consider the trend of the number of cases within the same RA and, from that, identify the occurrence and permanence of epidemics.

The seasonal signature model and the seasonal parameters of the series were obtained using the EPIPOI2626 Alonso WJ, McCormick BJJ. EPIPOI: A user-friendly analytical tool for the extraction and visualization of temporal parameters from epidemiological time series. BMC Public Health 2012; 12:982. software. All indicators were organized in geographic databases and presented in thematic maps built in the ArcGIS 10.43030 ESRI. ArcGIS Desktop: Release 10.4. Redlands, CA: Environmental Systems Research Institute; 2016. Geographic Information System (GIS) software.

This research was approved by the Research Ethics Committee (CEP) of the National School of Public Health (ENSP) of the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz).

Results

In the period from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2017, 70,495 probable cases of dengue were registered in the Federal District. Of these, approximately 74% occurred in 2010, 2013, 2014, and 2016, which were considered epidemic years.

Graph 1 shows a high number of cases in 2015, with a peak in May, but not exceeding the upper limit for epidemics. Considering the seasonality of the time series, the 2010 epidemic started in March, before the seasonal peak calculated for the entire historical series by the model, in April. In 2013, the epidemic peak and the peak of the seasonal signature of the series occurred at the same time. In 2014, it occurred a month later, in May. In 2016, the epidemic anticipated meaningly, beginning in January and peaking in February.

Graph 1
Time series of dengue cases in the Federal District, Brazil, seasonal signature, and upper limit for epidemics from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2017.

In the study period analyzed, a significant increase in the number of cases was observed from 2010. The number of cases was higher in the first semesters, particularly between the end of summer and the beginning of autumn, a period that coincides with the end of the rainy season. The highest number of cases was observed in February 2016, the year in which the epidemic period was anticipated (Graph 1).

From the analysis of seasonal signatures by RA, 82 epidemics were counted between 2007 and 2017. RA Varjão showed an epidemic behavior in 5 years. Gama, Lago Sul, and Sobradinho registered epidemics for four years. Fourteen RAs (45%) had three epidemics; ten RAs recorded two epidemics, and only Estrutural, Guará, and Plano Piloto had a single epidemic in the period (Figure 1).

Figure 1
Spatial distribution of the number of epidemics by Administrative Region of the Federal District (2007-2017).

The map in Figure 2 shows the annual primary peak month of the seasonal signature to the time series of each RA. Plano Piloto, Brazlândia, and Taguatinga reach the epidemic peak in February. Vicente Pires, Guará, and Sobradinho, in March. The most frequent month was April, with 23 (74%) of the RAs. Varjão, Sudoeste/Octogonal, and Itapoã were the RAs that show dengue epidemic behavior in May.

Figure 2
Month of the annual primary peak of seasonal signatures of the dengue time series of the RAs in the Federal District (DF).

While the map of the number of epidemics (Figure 1) shows the persistence of epidemics over the years, the maps in Figure 3 show the intra-annual persistence of epidemics. It is observed that the epidemics occurred spatially dispersed in 2010 for many RAs, and had a short duration, in general. In that year, 23 (74%) of the RAs had only one epidemic month. In the Candangolândia, Plano Piloto, Recanto das Emas, and Vicente Pires RAs, the epidemic lasted two months. Only in Planaltina, the epidemic persisted for three months.

Figure 3
Spatial distribution of the number of epidemic months for dengue by Administrative Region of the Federal District.

In 2013, Brazlândia, Lago Norte, Park Way and Varjão recorded only one month of epidemic behavior. In the Lago Sul, Riacho Fundo I, Samambaia, Sudoeste/Octogonal and Taguatinga RAs, the epidemic lasted two months. In Águas Claras and Ceilândia, it lasted three months. Only in Vicente Pires the epidemic persisted for four consecutive months.

In 2014, Candangolândia, Itapoã, Jardim Botânico, Núcleo Bandeirante and Paranoá had only one month of epidemic behavior. Santa Maria, Sobradinho and Sobradinho II had two months of epidemic. Varjão recorded three epidemic months, and Fercal and Gama had an epidemic lasting four months.

The year of 2015 was not considered an epidemic year if we take into account the DF as a whole. However, when applying the model to the RAs, it appears that 7 (22%) of them had an epidemic behavior. Cruzeiro, Planaltina, Jardim Botânico, and Varjão registered only one epidemic month. Sobradinho and Gama had two months of epidemic behavior, and the epidemic lasted three months in Lago Sul.

In 2016, the Setor de Indústria e Abastecimento (SIA) and Varjão RAs recorded one month of epidemic behavior. Lago Norte, Sudoeste/Octogonal, Itapoã, Paranoá, Sobradinho and Gama had two months of epidemic. Twelve (39%) RAs had three epidemic months, and the epidemic persisted for four months in Brazlândia, Riacho Fundo I, Núcleo Bandeirante and Santa Maria.

The map of the proportion of epidemic months in the study period (2007-2017) (Figure 4) shows that epidemics were more persistent in the RAs Gama, Lago Sul, and Vicente Pires, with nine (6.82%) epidemic months. Ten (32%) RAs had between six and seven (3.80%-5.30%) epidemic months. Thirteen (42%) RAs had between three and five months (1.53%-3.79%); Cruzeiro, Plano Piloto, and SIA had two (1.52%) months, and Estrutural and Guará had only one epidemic month.

Figure 4
Spatial distribution of the proportion of epidemic months (dengue) for the entire period, by RAs in the Federal District (DF).

Discussion

Dengue remains hyper-endemic in the Federal District (DF), with the four serotypes circulating, and with new cases recorded during all months of the year, a similars cenario to the large Brazilian cities. The existence of many serotypes circulating in a large population is one of the main factors for continuous occurrence of epidemics over the years2828 Barcellos C, Lowe R. Expansion of the dengue transmission area in Brazil: The role of climate and cities. Trop Med Int Heal 2014; 19(2):159-168.. Four dengue epidemics were observed in the DF during the study period, in 2010, 2013, 2014 and 2016.

In the 2010 epidemic, the circulating serotypes were DENV-1, DENV-2, and DENV-3. Serotypes DENV-1 and DENV-4 were present in the 2013 epidemic. In the following year, only DENV-1 was detected. In the 2016 epidemic, the four serotypes circulated in the DF, characterizing a hyper-endemic scenario. However, DENV-1 predominated2828 Barcellos C, Lowe R. Expansion of the dengue transmission area in Brazil: The role of climate and cities. Trop Med Int Heal 2014; 19(2):159-168.

29 Catão R. Expansão e Consolidação do Complexo Patogênico do Dengue no Estado de São Paulo: Difusão Espacial e Barreiras Geográficas [tese]. Presidente Prudente: UNESP; 2016.

30 ESRI. ArcGIS Desktop: Release 10.4. Redlands, CA: Environmental Systems Research Institute; 2016.
-3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009. in all epidemics.

The analysis of dengue seasonality in the DF allowed us to observe that, in general, in the years when epidemics started earlier, as in 2010, in February, and 2016, in January, the intensity of the epidemic peak (considering the value of the month with the highest number of cases) and the duration of the epidemic is longer than in the years of late epidemics. It is assumed that epidemics that start later can’t keep a high number of cases due to changes in temperature and precipitation in May, essential variables for the survival of the vector.

On the other hand, epidemics that occur later may recur in the following year, as they may not reach a sufficient number of susceptible individuals for the population to be immune. This may have occurred in the 2013 and 2014 epidemics.

In the years when epidemics started earlier, in 2010 and 2016, there was also a higher spreading capacity for epidemics, which occurred in almost all RAs. Similar results were found by Xavier et al.1212 Xavier DR, Magalhães MAFM, Gracie R, Reis IC, Matos VP, Barcellos C. Difusão espaço-tempo do dengue no Município do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, no período de 2000-2013. Cad Saude Publica 2017; 33(2):e00186615. when analyzing dengue epidemics in the city of Rio de Janeiro.

The temporal indicators allowed understanding the persistence of epidemics considering the years and months of occurrence. The Varjão and Lago Sul RAs, with 5 and 4 epidemic years in the study period, respectively, are located in the Controlled Use Zone I of the Territorial Planning Master Plan (PDOT) in force in the Federal District. This area is part of the Lago Paranoá basin and has an urban landscape marked by free public and private spaces. In the PDOT, the role of this Zone stands out in terms of preserving the protected area and the visual landscape of the Plano Piloto3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009..

This area is considered of great environmental importance, with the presence of protected areas and of environmental interest. The use is predominantly low-density housing, favoring the maintenance of green areas. However, RA Varjão is considered a high-density enclave in this Zone. The socioeconomic profile of the population in the Controlled Use Urban Zone I is characterized by medium-high and high income in areas of lower population density, such as Lago Sul, and low income in areas of higher density, such as Varjão3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009..

It should be noted that these two RAs are not populous. RA Lago Sul ranks 24th in population size, estimated at 28,981 in 2015. RA Varjão has the third-smallest population, with only 8,453 inhabitants3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015.. A small population can imply a small number of susceptible people. This would explain the fact that this RA has an annual recurrence of epidemics with a short duration. This RA had only one epidemic month in four of the years in which it had an epidemic. The exception was 2013, in which the epidemic lasted three months.

The Sobradinho and Gama RAs are located in the Consolidated Urban Zone. These are areas served by urban infrastructure and equipment. They have medium and low population density with some high-density enclaves. Sobradinho, however, is considered a location with limited water supply and unsuitable sanitary sewage network by the 2009 PDOT3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009., which can favor the transmission and maintenance of dengue. The possible scarcity or interruption of the water supply service means that families must store water in barrels and other containers for consumption, favorable to the reproduction of the vector88 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946.,3333 Oliveira RM, Valla VV. As condições e as experiências de vida de grupos populares no Rio de Janeiro: repensando a mobilização popular no controle do dengue. Cad Saude Publica 2001; 17(Supl.):77-88.,3434 Lagrotta MTF. Geoprocessamento de indicadores entomológicos na identificação de áreas, imóveis e recipientes "chaves" no controle do Aedes aegypti. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2006..

The RA Gama was one of the first to register autochthonous transmission of dengue in the DF in 19973535 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Saúde (SES). Dengue No DF Informe Epidemiológico; 2009. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: http://www.saude.df.gov.br/wp-conteudo/uploads/2018/08/Informe_n_1_sobre_situacao_de_dengue_no_DF_-_10-02-09.pdf.
http://www.saude.df.gov.br/wp-conteudo/u...
. This RA has an estimated population of 134,111 inhabitants, with a mean monthly household income estimated at 5.76 minimum wages (MW), the 17th position among the 31 RAs3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015..

It is noted, therefore, that urban areas in which epidemics have been more recurrent have different occupation patterns. San Pedro et al.88 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946. analyzed locations with a similar incidence of dengue, but with different urban and socioeconomic patterns in Região Oceânica de Niterói. These authors identified distinct risk factors determining dengue transmission. The first refers to limited water supply service offer and scarce financial resources. The second is related to abundant resources, which allows water storage practices88 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946..

A large number of gardens and pools88 San Pedro A, Souza-Santos R, Sabroza PC, Oliveira RM. Condições particulares de produção e reprodução da dengue em nível local: estudo de Itaipu, Região Oceânica de Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 2009; 25(9):1937-1946. have been identified in areas with this second type of risk, as in RA Lago Sul. This result, however, should be viewed with caution, as containers of up to 100 ml and above 5,000 liters can be considered to be not very productive regarding the capacity to produce adult forms of the vector3434 Lagrotta MTF. Geoprocessamento de indicadores entomológicos na identificação de áreas, imóveis e recipientes "chaves" no controle do Aedes aegypti. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2006..

Besides the permanence of epidemics throughout the study period, the intra-annual duration of epidemics was also analyzed. In 2016, as in 2010, the epidemic affected almost all RAs, with some exceptions, and the epidemic had a long duration in the Federal District in those two years.

However, in general, we observed a short duration of epidemics in the RAs in 2010. This dynamic suggests a possible movement of epidemics across the urban space. In 2016, in contrast, epidemics persisted for a longer time also in the RAs. This may be because the four dengue serotypes were circulating in 2016, besides the Chikungunya and Zika viruses3636 Distrito Federal (DF). Informe Epidemiológico de Dengue, Chikungunya e Zika No 52. Semana Epidemiológica 51 de 2016.; 2016. [acessado 2018 Maio 30]. Disponível em: http://www.saude.df.gov.br/wp-conteudo/uploads/2018/08/Informativo_n_52_2016.pdf
http://www.saude.df.gov.br/wp-conteudo/u...
. Some Zika or Chikungunya cases may have been reported as dengue due to clinical-epidemiological criteria and vice versa.

In 2013 and 2014, the epidemics lasted only one month for the DF. However, some RAs experienced a long-term epidemic in those years. RAs Vicente Pires, in 2013, and Gama, in 2014, recorded epidemics with a duration of four months. This can point to favorable conditions for the reproduction of the vector and, consequently, the transmission and permanence of the disease in these RAs.

These same RAs, Vicente Pires and Gama, and RA Lago Sul had the highest proportion of epidemic months in the period. Vicente Pires is considered by the PDOT in force as an Urban Qualification and Expansion Zone. In the previous PDOT, in 1997, this area was intended for rural use, but it underwent an intense process of urban occupation, and it is a medium-income/population density territory3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009..

The occupation of this RA was based on informal settlements and illegal land demarcation. Much of its area is located in Permanent (APP) and Environmental Preservation (APA) Areas, with many springs that were grounded for the construction of buildings1818 Paviani A. Geografia Urbana do Distrito Federal: Evolução e Tendências. Espaço e Geogr 2007; 10(1):1-22.,3737 Moura AM. A organização social do território e formas de provisão de moradia. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 201-230..

It is configured as a dormitory city, with only 13.75% of its residents working in the RA. It is a predominantly residential area with single-family homes, and with the presence of some horizontal condominiums. The low supply of jobs and services implies a significant dependence on the Plano Piloto and is a legacy of modernist urbanization3838 Medeiros VAS, Barros AP. A organização social do território e mobilidade urbana. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 252-284..

It should be noted, however, that RA Vicente Pires has a medium household income of 10.92 MW, the eighth highest income in the DF3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015.. This RA is located in one of the main roads, the Estrada Parque Taguatinga (EPTG), which concentrates the most populous RAs3838 Medeiros VAS, Barros AP. A organização social do território e mobilidade urbana. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 252-284.. A principle of conurbation occurs in this axis, breaking with the polynucleated pattern of urban land occupation1818 Paviani A. Geografia Urbana do Distrito Federal: Evolução e Tendências. Espaço e Geogr 2007; 10(1):1-22.,2020 Holanda F, Medeiros V, Ribeiro R, Moura A. A configuração da Área Metropolitana de Brasília. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 64-97..

The RAs Gama, Lago Sul, and Vicente Pires also have a high density of households (number of people per household)1414 Silveira BD, Siqueira R, Gurgel H, Ramalho WM. Dengue e desigualdades socioespaciais no Distrito Federal, Brasil (2007-2014). Dourados: UFGD; 2017.. Another shared aspect among these RAs is the predominance of the house-type home (or single-family home). It is known that apartment-type housing can be a protective factor against epidemics of arboviruses such as dengue, as containers that are configured as potential breeding sites for the vector are more present in homes and their yards than in apartments3939 Barcellos C, Kreutz Pustai A, Weber MA, Varnieri Brito MR. Identificação de locais com potencial de transmissão de dengue em Porto Alegre através de técnicas de geoprocessamento. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 2005; 38(3):246-250..

The analysis of the time indicator (moment), indicating the month of occurrence of the first peaks of seasonal signatures of the RAs dengue time series suggests a spread of epidemics from the RAs Plano Piloto, Brazlândia and Taguatinga, with the first peak occurring in February.

The Plano Piloto is part of the Urban Heritage Complex Area. This area corresponds to the polygonal listed by the National Historical and Artistic Heritage Institute (IPHAN) and recognized by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as a Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Thus, the occupation of this area follows the rules and restrictions on land use in order to preserve the heritage listed3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009.,4040 Costa EB, Silveira B, Severo D, Araújo E, Beserra F, Carmo T. Metropolização, patrimonialização e potenciais de conflitos socioterritoriais em Brasília (DF). Espaço e Geogr. 2013; 16(1):325-367..

This area is configured as the primary centrality of the DF’s intra-urban space. It centralizes administrative activities of the DF and the Federal Government, concentrating the most substantial job offerings, as well as regional services and equipment. Thus, it has an intense demand for new spaces for these activities and urban transport infrastructure3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009.. Medium-high and high-income populations prevail in this RA. It has a medium demographic density, and there is a predominance of apartment-type housing1414 Silveira BD, Siqueira R, Gurgel H, Ramalho WM. Dengue e desigualdades socioespaciais no Distrito Federal, Brasil (2007-2014). Dourados: UFGD; 2017.,3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009.,3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015..

RA Taguatinga was the first satellite city, created in 1958 before the Plano Piloto was inaugurated and located 25 km from it. It was built to house the population of migrants and workers who already inhabited the capital’s construction site in camps, shacks, and slums. This population was transferred to Taguatinga, where each family received a plot of land, but without urban infrastructure4141 Paviani A. A construção injusta do espaço urbano. In: Paviani A. A Conquista Da Cidade: Movimentos Populares Em Brasília. Brasília: UnB; 1991. p. 115-142.. Over the years, Taguatinga has structured itself as the most complete “satellite city”4141 Paviani A. A construção injusta do espaço urbano. In: Paviani A. A Conquista Da Cidade: Movimentos Populares Em Brasília. Brasília: UnB; 1991. p. 115-142.. It is well served by urban infrastructure and equipment and is in the Consolidated Urban Zone of the PDOT3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009.. This RA can be considered a sub-center in the DF4242 Souza SMC. Expansão urbana, centralidade e constituição de subcentros no Distrito Federal [dissertação]. Brasília: UnB; 2010., with the second-largest number of jobs in the DF. However, it should be noted that this percentage is only 7.71%, while Plano Piloto holds 41.53% of the jobs in the DF3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015..

RA Brazlândia is an urban center that originated in the 1930s, preceding the implantation of the Capital. It underwent an expansion process with principles of modernist urbanism that has little connection with the “pre-modern” urban space, which implies a fragmented urban fabric, with different configurations2020 Holanda F, Medeiros V, Ribeiro R, Moura A. A configuração da Área Metropolitana de Brasília. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 64-97.. It is considered an isolated urban center in the DF2020 Holanda F, Medeiros V, Ribeiro R, Moura A. A configuração da Área Metropolitana de Brasília. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 64-97.. After the Plano Piloto (89.35%), it is the second RA with the highest percentage of people working in the same RA they live in (53.49%)3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015., which expresses independence concerning the primary centrality of the urban space of the DF, located about 52 km away. The closest urban centers in the Federal District are Taguatinga and Ceilândia, about 30 km away, and the Goiás municipality of Águas Lindas de Goiás, about 18 km away3838 Medeiros VAS, Barros AP. A organização social do território e mobilidade urbana. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 252-284.. RA Brazlândia is inserted in the Urban Controlled Use Zone II. It has an estimated population of 51,816 inhabitants and a low demographic density. It is considered one of the largest producers of horticultural products in the Federal District, but most of its employed population is concentrated in the tertiary sector. The population’s income is considered low (only 1.25 MW per capita)3131 Distrito Federal (DF). Secretaria de Estado de Desenvolvimento Urbano e Habitação (SEDUH). Plano Diretor de Ordenamento Territorial Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: SEDUH; 2009.,3232 Pesquisa Distrital por Amostra de Domicílios (PDAD). Pesquisa Distrital Por Amostra de Domicílios Do Distrito Federal. Brasília: PDAD; 2015..

Thus, of the three RAs with the model’s first peak in February, two are configured as centralities. Of the three that reach the epidemic peakin March, Guará and Sobradinho are also a urban centrality, and Vicente Pires is on the central axis of urban expansion that connects Taguatinga to Plano Piloto3838 Medeiros VAS, Barros AP. A organização social do território e mobilidade urbana. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 252-284.,4242 Souza SMC. Expansão urbana, centralidade e constituição de subcentros no Distrito Federal [dissertação]. Brasília: UnB; 2010..

When analyzing the dengue, chikungunya, and Zika epidemics in Salvador in 2015 and 2016, Santana4343 Santana LS. Difusão espacial das epidemias de febre Zika no município de Salvador - Bahia, 2015 - 2016: a dispersão dessa doença possui o mesmo padrão das epidemias de dengue e febre chikungunya? [tese]. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2018. found that the main focus of transmission occurs in an area extending from the west of the municipality to the central region, and spread occurs by expansion. However, it should be noted that the oldest and most consolidated space in Salvador is different from the polynucleated and modernist intra-city space in the DF.

When analyzing the spread of the vector and dengue in the state of São Paulo, Catão2929 Catão R. Expansão e Consolidação do Complexo Patogênico do Dengue no Estado de São Paulo: Difusão Espacial e Barreiras Geográficas [tese]. Presidente Prudente: UNESP; 2016. found that both have mixed spread – hierarchical and by contagion. This author found that the cities and urban and metropolitan clusters with higher centrality and a population size that allows the endemicity of dengue in areas more favorable from the environmental perspective act as spreaders of dengue in their closest regions and even throughout the state2929 Catão R. Expansão e Consolidação do Complexo Patogênico do Dengue no Estado de São Paulo: Difusão Espacial e Barreiras Geográficas [tese]. Presidente Prudente: UNESP; 2016..

From the results of the time indicator (moment) found for the RAs, we can affirm that the centralities of the intra-urban space of DF – Plano Piloto, Taguatinga, Guará, and Sobradinho –3838 Medeiros VAS, Barros AP. A organização social do território e mobilidade urbana. In: Ribeiro R, Tenório G, Holanda F, organizadores. Brasília: Transformações Na Ordem Urbana. Rio de Janeiro: Letra Capital; 2015. p. 252-284.,4242 Souza SMC. Expansão urbana, centralidade e constituição de subcentros no Distrito Federal [dissertação]. Brasília: UnB; 2010. have earlier epidemic peaks (February and March) than the other RAs.

The limitations of this study refer to dengue data, as they were considered probable cases by laboratory and clinical-epidemiological criteria. As the symptoms of dengue are very similar to those of other arboviruses, such as chikungunya and Zika, there may have been a clinical-epidemiological reporting bias. Moreover, dengue has asymptomatic cases, with the possibility of underreporting.

Another limitation refers to the fact that this work did not take into account socio-environmental indicators that reflect the determinants of dengue. These indicators would have allowed more robust analyses, identifying possible correlations, as well as characterizing the areas by intra-urban typologies of social vulnerability and receptivity to the arboviruses and the vector. This limitation is thus the main suggestion for the development of future researches.

Final considerations

The main findings of this study concern the identification of dengue transmission patterns in the DF, taking into account the permanence of epidemics, their duration, and the seasonal variation of the arbovirus. This information is very relevant to health surveillance activities and collaborates to broaden the understanding of endemic-epidemic processes.

Surveillance can be prepared in advance and more effectively with these indicators, considering the particularities of the transmission patterns in each area, as well as the types of occupation and processes that occurred in them. Worth highlighting the use of spatial analysis tools, which are configured as essential instruments for these activities in the identification of areas and the characterization of transmission patterns of arboviruses.

The highest values of epidemic permanence indicators over the years and intra-annual duration of epidemics were located in areas with different types of space occupation and with different income and demographic density profiles. High permanence and duration were found in areas of low income and high population density; middle income and different densities, but with limited water supply; high income, with pools and gardens. Thus, these different types of occupation, but with similar permanence and duration indicators, suggest that dengue persists for a longer time in areas with varied urban space production processes that provide different water storage practices and needs.

Another important finding concerns the time when epidemics start. It was found that the centralities of intra-urban space in the DF have epidemic peaks earlier than most other locations. This information may be relevant because the surveillance activities in the other areas can be prepared in the face of notification of the increasing cases in the central areas.

Health surveillance services can apply the method used in this paper in small areas, which do not have population estimates for calculating incidence rates. It employs a control diagram, however more robustly than usual, because it simultaneously considers seasonal behavior, annual changes, and the random component that configures an epidemic situation. Thus, the method employed depends only on dengue cases data recorded by neighborhoods, districts, or coverage area of the health post. These data are available in most Brazilian municipalities. Its routine use by health surveillance services would allow the detection of localized outbreaks and their tendency to spread in cities.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) for the first author’s master’s scholarship.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    08 May 2020
  • Date of issue
    May 2020

History

  • Received
    30 May 2019
  • Accepted
    07 Aug 2019
  • Published
    13 Nov 2019
ABRASCO - Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: revscol@fiocruz.br