RESIDENTIAL SETTING AS A RISK FACTOR FOR LYME-DISEASE IN A HYPERENDEMIC REGION

Citation
Ek. Cromley et al., RESIDENTIAL SETTING AS A RISK FACTOR FOR LYME-DISEASE IN A HYPERENDEMIC REGION, American journal of epidemiology, 147(5), 1998, pp. 472-477
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
ISSN journal
00029262
Volume
147
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
472 - 477
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9262(1998)147:5<472:RSAARF>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
The hypothesis that residence in a uniform medium-density residential development is associated with lower incidence of Lyme disease is test ed with data from a rural, 12-town region of south-central Connecticut where the disease is hyperendemic. The residential setting for 424 ca ses identified by active surveillance from 1993 through 1995 was deter mined. Cases located within the Eastern Coastal ecologic region, where tick densities are known to be higher than inland and where most of t he population in the region resides, were selected for further analysi s. Within this region, residence in a homogeneous area of medium-densi ty development at least 30 acres (12 ha) in size was associated with a two-to 10-fold lower level of risk than residence in surrounding less developed areas, depending on the estimate of residential population. Type of residential development may be an important factor to conside r, in addition to other environmental variables, in studies of peridom estic vector-borne disease in human populations.