Meteorological factors, population immunity, and COVID-19 incidence: A global multi-city analysis

Feurer, D; Riffe, T; Kniffka, MS; Acosta, E.; Armstrong, B; Mistry, M; Lowe, R; Roye, D.; Hashizume, M; Madaniyazi, L; Ng, CFS; Tobias, A; Íñiguez C.; Vicedo-Cabrera, AM; Ragettli M.S.; et. al.

Keywords: precipitation, temperature, humidity, solar radiation, COVID-19, Distributed lag nonlinear models, Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative Research Network, Time-series design

Abstract

Objectives:While COVID-19 continues to challenge the world, meteorological variables are thought to impact COVID-19 transmission. Previous studies showed evidence of negative associations between high temperature and absolute humidity on COVID-19 transmission. Our research aims to fill the knowledge gap on the modifying effect of vaccination rates and strains on the weather-COVID-19 association.Methods:Our study included COVID-19 data from 439 cities in 22 countries spanning 3 February 2020 - 31 August 2022 and meteorological variables (temperature, relative humidity, absolute humidity, solar radiation, and precipitation). We used a two-stage time-series design to assess the association between meteorological factors and COVID-19 incidence. For the exposure modeling, we used distributed lag nonlinear models with a lag of up to 14 days. Finally, we pooled the estimates using a random effect meta-analytic model and tested vaccination rates and dominant strains as possible effect modifiers.Results:Our results showed an association between temperature and absolute humidity on COVID-19 transmission. At 5 degrees C, the relative risk of COVID-19 incidence is 1.22-fold higher compared to a reference level at 17 degrees C. Correlated with temperature, we observed an inverse association for absolute humidity. We observed a tendency of increased risk on days without precipitation, but no association for relative humidity and solar radiation. No interaction between vaccination rates or strains on the weather-COVID-19 association was observed.Conclusions:This study strengthens previous evidence of a relationship of temperature and absolute humidity with COVID-19 incidence. Furthermore, no evidence was found that vaccinations and strains significantly modify the relationship between environmental factors and COVID-19 transmission.

Más información

Título según WOS: Meteorological factors, population immunity, and COVID-19 incidence: A global multi-city analysis
Volumen: 8
Número: 6
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1097/EE9.0000000000000338

Notas: ISI