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Warmer weather unlikely to reduce the COVID-19 transmission: An ecological study in 202 locations in 8 countries

Authors :
Lina Zhang
Zhixi Liu
Ye Yao
John S. Ji
Weidong Wang
Weibing Wang
Jinhua Pan
Haidong Kan
Xia Meng
Yang Qiu
Source :
The Science of the Total Environment
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose To examine the association between meteorological factors (temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and UV radiation) and transmission capacity of COVID-19. Methods We collected daily numbers of COVID-19 cases in 202 locations in 8 countries. We matched meteorological data from the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. We used a time-frequency approach to examine the possible association between meteorological conditions and basic reproductive number (R0) of COVID-19. We determined the correlations between meteorological factors and R0 of COVID-19 using multiple linear regression models and meta-analysis. We further validated our results using a susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) metapopulation model to simulate the changes of daily cases of COVID-19 in China under different temperatures and relative humidity conditions. Principal results Temperature did not exhibit significant association with R0 of COVID-19 (meta p = 0.446). Also, relative humidity (meta p = 0.215), wind speed (meta p = 0.986), and ultraviolet (UV) radiation (meta p = 0.491) were not significantly associated with R0 either. The SEIR model in China showed that with a wide range of meteorological conditions, the number of COVID-19 confirmed cases would not change substantially. Conclusions Meteorological conditions did not have statistically significant associations with the R0 of COVID-19. Warmer weather alone seems unlikely to reduce the COVID-19 transmission.<br />Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image<br />Highlights • Temperature did not exhibit significant associations with COVID-19's R0. • Other meteorological factors weren't significantly associated with COVID-19's R0. • It's unlikely to depend on warmer weather to reduce the COVID-19 transmission.

Details

ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
753
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science of The Total Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c431cc04e21ac9296f237bbce641d717