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Temperature data from satellite imagery and the distribution of schistosomiasis in Egypt

Temperature data from satellite imagery and the distribution of schistosomiasis in Egypt
Temperature data from satellite imagery and the distribution of schistosomiasis in Egypt
Polar orbiting environmental satellites operated by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration acquire daytime and nighttime thermal infrared measurements of the earth's surface around the world at a spatial resolution of 1.1 km. Day-night pairs of this imagery from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) were processed to produce temperature maximum, temperature minimum, and diurnal temperature difference (dT) maps of the lower Nile River valley. Nile delta subsets of the dT maps for August 16, 1990 and February 14, 1991 were analyzed in detail. Values of dT at specific locations were derived using the median of 5 x 5 pixels centered on the latitude and longitude of 41 survey sites listed in 1935, 1983, and 1990 schistosomiasis surveys of the Nile Delta. A Spearman correlation coefficient matrix revealed an inverse relationship between site dT values for August 16, 1990 and February 14, 1991 and prevalence of Schistosoma mansoni in the 1935 and 1983 surveys. For S. haematobium, a positive association of site dT values and prevalence was seen for 1935 only. A significant association was observed between 1935 S. mansoni prevalence and that observed in 1983 and 1990; S. haematobium prevalence in 1935 was not correlated with the later surveys. The results suggest that AVHRR thermal difference maps reflect regional hydrologic conditions that can be used as a predictor of environmental risk of schistosomiasis for control program management
0002-9637
714-722
Malone, John B.
e5d0b2ba-7617-4ae6-bcec-803845ee18c2
Wilson, Paul
f940a9f0-fa5a-4a64-9061-f0794bfbf7c6
Huh, O. K.
aeb9777e-18cd-4a25-a3e9-044cb49ccafd
Fehler, Dennis Paul
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Wilensky, D. E.
ca238fad-4180-491d-bfa7-e39e22b71079
Holmes, R. A.
9c200348-b1d1-4497-bf9f-c0e0dd905ff9
Elmagdoub, Al.
d1b868ae-7b47-4769-ab59-09761fcaf97f
Malone, John B.
e5d0b2ba-7617-4ae6-bcec-803845ee18c2
Wilson, Paul
f940a9f0-fa5a-4a64-9061-f0794bfbf7c6
Huh, O. K.
aeb9777e-18cd-4a25-a3e9-044cb49ccafd
Fehler, Dennis Paul
3f770418-0999-4aff-8eb8-4cd7292e245a
Wilensky, D. E.
ca238fad-4180-491d-bfa7-e39e22b71079
Holmes, R. A.
9c200348-b1d1-4497-bf9f-c0e0dd905ff9
Elmagdoub, Al.
d1b868ae-7b47-4769-ab59-09761fcaf97f

Malone, John B., Wilson, Paul, Huh, O. K., Fehler, Dennis Paul, Wilensky, D. E., Holmes, R. A. and Elmagdoub, Al. (1994) Temperature data from satellite imagery and the distribution of schistosomiasis in Egypt. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 50 (6), 714-722. (doi:10.4269/ajtmh.1994.50.714).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Polar orbiting environmental satellites operated by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration acquire daytime and nighttime thermal infrared measurements of the earth's surface around the world at a spatial resolution of 1.1 km. Day-night pairs of this imagery from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) were processed to produce temperature maximum, temperature minimum, and diurnal temperature difference (dT) maps of the lower Nile River valley. Nile delta subsets of the dT maps for August 16, 1990 and February 14, 1991 were analyzed in detail. Values of dT at specific locations were derived using the median of 5 x 5 pixels centered on the latitude and longitude of 41 survey sites listed in 1935, 1983, and 1990 schistosomiasis surveys of the Nile Delta. A Spearman correlation coefficient matrix revealed an inverse relationship between site dT values for August 16, 1990 and February 14, 1991 and prevalence of Schistosoma mansoni in the 1935 and 1983 surveys. For S. haematobium, a positive association of site dT values and prevalence was seen for 1935 only. A significant association was observed between 1935 S. mansoni prevalence and that observed in 1983 and 1990; S. haematobium prevalence in 1935 was not correlated with the later surveys. The results suggest that AVHRR thermal difference maps reflect regional hydrologic conditions that can be used as a predictor of environmental risk of schistosomiasis for control program management

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Published date: 7 June 1994

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 468483
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468483
ISSN: 0002-9637
PURE UUID: c26b435e-6b9f-4315-8ede-5b717e9e3cd3
ORCID for Paul Wilson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6425-8906

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Date deposited: 16 Aug 2022 16:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: John B. Malone
Author: Paul Wilson ORCID iD
Author: O. K. Huh
Author: Dennis Paul Fehler
Author: D. E. Wilensky
Author: R. A. Holmes
Author: Al. Elmagdoub

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