However, due to the relative strength of the evidence that average temperature18, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30 and hours of sunshine,6, 14, 18, 31, 32, 33, 34 and 35 are associated with IPD and viral infections it was determined that they were
a logical choice to account for seasonality. We found a 1 month lag in the association between IPD and hours of sunshine, consistent with three check details other studies reporting lags of 2–5 weeks6, 14 and 33 though no lag was reported in 2 other studies.31 and 32 This may be related to the strong, positive effects of sunlight on the immune system due to increased 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin-D metabolism.35 and 36 Other meteorological factors such as rainfall and relative humidity were not included in the models as associations with IPD and viral infections are less consistent.14, 18, 27 and 31 It may be that the use of average temperature as an adjustment for seasonality has led to slightly lower percentages, for some age-groups, of influenza-attributable IPD when compared to previous studies which included seasonal this website harmonic curves.11 and 17 However, the use of harmonic curves does not allow for annual variations. From our results using Pearson and Spearman’s correlation coefficients, we could
conclude that there is a very strong association between IPD and the viral infections; however these are rather crude measures of association that cannot be seasonally adjusted, and so are likely to overestimate any association in our data. Further analysis, beyond the use of correlation coefficients, should be considered in similar studies of seasonal diseases in order to formulate more robust conclusions. We investigated a range of regression models; looking at both additive and multiplicative models. Urease It is considered that the additive
model is a more plausible fit for this biological data,37 a multiplicative relationship between the independent variable terms in the model would be hard to substantiate. However, it is difficult to firmly conclude which model is the best as we have no gold standard for comparison (see ref and below).10 The ecological nature of this study restricts the conclusions that can be drawn. Research at an individual level may be more revealing with respect to the true incidence of virus-attributable IPD, but will be more challenging. Potential study designs that could be employed include case-control studies of IPD with serological investigations of recent viral infections. There are further limitations in the use of surveillance systems for the data in this study, under-reporting and changes over time in the reporting thresholds cannot be ruled out.