Abstract Many common diseases, such as the flu and cardiovascular disease, increase markedly in winter and dip in summer. These seasonal patterns have been part of life for millennia and were first noted in ancient Greece by both Hip-pocrates and Herodotus. Recent interest has fo-cused on climate change, and the concern that seasons will become more extreme with harsher winter and summer weather. We describe a set of R functions designed to model seasonal pat-terns in disease. We illustrate some simple de-scriptive and graphical methods, a more com-plex method that is able to model non-stationary patterns, and the case-crossover to control for seasonal confounding
<p>Months and seasons shown refers to month/seasons of the northern hemisphere (i.e. January = month...
(a) Seasonal Mann-Kendall p-values of seasonal sensitive life style diseases represented as heat map...
Background. Epldemlological inferences about the aetiology of a disease can often be made from Its s...
Many common diseases, such as the flu and cardiovascular disease, increase markedly in winter and di...
Seasonal patterns have been found in a remarkable range of health conditions, including birth defect...
Epidemiological studies have shown that extremes in ambient temperature are associated with short te...
Seasonal effects are dominant in many environmental time series and important or at least notable in...
The seasonalities of influenza-like illnesses (ILIs) and invasive pneumococcal diseases (IPDs) remai...
Infectious disease data from surveillance systems are typically available as multivariate times seri...
International audienceThe seasonalities of influenza-like illnesses (ILIs) and invasive pneumococcal...
<p>Months and seasons shown refers to month/seasons of the northern hemisphere (i.e. January = month...
Several methods have been used to assess the seasonality of health outcomes in epidemiological studi...
Background Many infectious diseases of public health importance display annual seasonal patterns in...
In the current work we present a set of computational algorithms aimed to analyze the acute respirat...
<p>(Enzootic pneumonia-like (EP), pleurisy (PL), pleuropneumoniae (PP), lung abscess (Abscess)). The...
<p>Months and seasons shown refers to month/seasons of the northern hemisphere (i.e. January = month...
(a) Seasonal Mann-Kendall p-values of seasonal sensitive life style diseases represented as heat map...
Background. Epldemlological inferences about the aetiology of a disease can often be made from Its s...
Many common diseases, such as the flu and cardiovascular disease, increase markedly in winter and di...
Seasonal patterns have been found in a remarkable range of health conditions, including birth defect...
Epidemiological studies have shown that extremes in ambient temperature are associated with short te...
Seasonal effects are dominant in many environmental time series and important or at least notable in...
The seasonalities of influenza-like illnesses (ILIs) and invasive pneumococcal diseases (IPDs) remai...
Infectious disease data from surveillance systems are typically available as multivariate times seri...
International audienceThe seasonalities of influenza-like illnesses (ILIs) and invasive pneumococcal...
<p>Months and seasons shown refers to month/seasons of the northern hemisphere (i.e. January = month...
Several methods have been used to assess the seasonality of health outcomes in epidemiological studi...
Background Many infectious diseases of public health importance display annual seasonal patterns in...
In the current work we present a set of computational algorithms aimed to analyze the acute respirat...
<p>(Enzootic pneumonia-like (EP), pleurisy (PL), pleuropneumoniae (PP), lung abscess (Abscess)). The...
<p>Months and seasons shown refers to month/seasons of the northern hemisphere (i.e. January = month...
(a) Seasonal Mann-Kendall p-values of seasonal sensitive life style diseases represented as heat map...
Background. Epldemlological inferences about the aetiology of a disease can often be made from Its s...