Figure 1.

Epidemiology of respiratory viruses in a Brazilian slum. A, Paraisópolis, adapted under a creative commons license from: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paraisopolis_sao_paulo.jpg#mw‐jumpto‐license and freely available data from www.naturalearth.com. B, Percentage of monoinfections and coinfections. C, Percentage of monoinfections and coinfections by the virus. D, Seasonality of enveloped (left) and non‐enveloped viruses (right) shown separately for clarity of presentation. E, Symptom frequency in monoinfections. Only one monoinfection was observed for human parechovirus and clinical data are not shown for clarity of presentation. F, Virus detection by age group. G, Rhinovirus phylogeny representing the study period. Species are given next to circles. Roman letters I‐VII designate HRV clusters occurring over more than one season. Black dots at internal nodes represent support of grouping higher than 75% from 1000 bootstrap replicates. AdV, adenovirus; EV, enterovirus; FLU, influenza A and B viruses; HCoV, human coronaviruses 229E, NL63, OC43 and HKU1; hPeV, human parechovirus; hPIV, human parainfluenzaviruses 1 to 4; hRSV, human respiratory syncytial virus; HRV, human rhinoviruses A‐C