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      The passive surveillance of ticks using companion animal electronic health records

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          SUMMARY

          Ticks represent a large global reservoir of zoonotic disease. Current surveillance systems can be time and labour intensive. We propose that the passive surveillance of companion animal electronic health records (EHRs) could provide a novel methodology for describing temporal and spatial tick activity. A total of 16 58 857 EHRs were collected over a 2-year period (31 March 2014 and 29 May 2016) from companion animals attending a large sentinel network of 192 veterinary clinics across Great Britain (the Small Animal Veterinary Surveillance Network – SAVSNET). In total, 2180 EHRs were identified where a tick was recorded on an animal. The relative risk of dogs presenting with a tick compared with cats was 0·73 (95% confidence intervals 0·67–0·80). The highest number of tick records were in the south central regions of England. The presence of ticks showed marked seasonality with summer peaks, and a secondary smaller peak in autumn for cats; ticks were still being found throughout most of Great Britain during the winter. This suggests that passive surveillance of companion animal EHRs can describe tick activity temporally and spatially in a large cohort of veterinary clinics across Great Britain. These results and methodology could help inform veterinary and public health messages as well as increase awareness of ticks and tick-borne diseases in the general population.

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          Robust Locally Weighted Regression and Smoothing Scatterplots

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            Effects of Climate Change on Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases in Europe

            Zoonotic tick-borne diseases are an increasing health burden in Europe and there is speculation that this is partly due to climate change affecting vector biology and disease transmission. Data on the vector tick Ixodes ricinus suggest that an extension of its northern and altitude range has been accompanied by an increased prevalence of tick-borne encephalitis. Climate change may also be partly responsible for the change in distribution of Dermacentor reticulatus. Increased winter activity of I. ricinus is probably due to warmer winters and a retrospective study suggests that hotter summers will change the dynamics and pattern of seasonal activity, resulting in the bulk of the tick population becoming active in the latter part of the year. Climate suitability models predict that eight important tick species are likely to establish more northern permanent populations in a climate-warming scenario. However, the complex ecology and epidemiology of such tick-borne diseases as Lyme borreliosis and tick-borne encephalitis make it difficult to implicate climate change as the main cause of their increasing prevalence. Climate change models are required that take account of the dynamic biological processes involved in vector abundance and pathogen transmission in order to predict future tick-borne disease scenarios.
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              Impact of climatic change on the northern latitude limit and population density of the disease-transmitting European tick Ixodes ricinus.

              We examined whether a reported northward expansion of the geographic distribution limit of the disease-transmitting tick Ixodes ricinus and an increased tick density between the early 1980s and mid-1990s in Sweden was related to climatic changes. The annual number of days with minimum temperatures above vital bioclimatic thresholds for the tick's life-cycle dynamics were related to tick density in both the early 1980s and the mid-1990s in 20 districts in central and northern Sweden. The winters were markedly milder in all of the study areas in the 1990s as compared to the 1980s. Our results indicate that the reported northern shift in the distribution limit of ticks is related to fewer days during the winter seasons with low minimum temperatures, i.e., below -12 degrees C. At high latitudes, low winter temperatures had the clearest impact on tick distribution. Further south, a combination of mild winters (fewer days with minimum temperatures below -7 degrees C) and extended spring and autumn seasons (more days with minimum temperatures from 5 to 8 degrees C) was related to increases in tick density. We conclude that the relatively mild climate of the 1990s in Sweden is probably one of the primary reasons for the observed increase of density and geographic range of I. ricinus ticks. Images Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Epidemiol Infect
                Epidemiol. Infect
                HYG
                Epidemiology and Infection
                Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, UK )
                0950-2688
                1469-4409
                July 2017
                02 May 2017
                : 145
                : 10
                : 2020-2029
                Affiliations
                [1 ]NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Emerging and Zoonotic Infections, University of Liverpool , Liverpool, UK
                [2 ]Institute of Infection and Global Health, The Farr Institute@HeRC, University of Liverpool , Waterhouse Building (2nd Floor, Block F), 1-5 Brownlow Street, Liverpool, L69 3GL, UK
                [3 ]Medical Entomology Group, Emergency Response Department, Public Health England , Porton Down, Salisbury, SP4 0JG, UK
                [4 ]NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Health and the Environment , Porton Down, SP4 0JG, UK
                [5 ]Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool , Leahurst Campus, Chester High Road, Neston, S. Wirral, CH64 7TE, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Author for correspondence: J. S. P. Tulloch, NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Emerging and Zoonotic Infections, University of Liverpool , Liverpool, UK. (Email: jtulloch@ 123456liverpool.ac.uk )
                Article
                S0950268817000826 00082
                10.1017/S0950268817000826
                5968307
                28462753
                5d92de79-c014-428f-832c-208dea3bb227
                © Cambridge University Press 2017

                This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 24 January 2017
                : 27 February 2017
                : 28 March 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 3, References: 41, Pages: 10
                Categories
                Original Papers
                Zoonoses

                Public health
                companion animals,electronic health records,great britain,one health,surveillance,ticks
                Public health
                companion animals, electronic health records, great britain, one health, surveillance, ticks

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