A warm summer is unlikely to stop transmission of COVID‐19 naturally

Elderly at risk,
Warmth won’t halt the virus’ march,
Policy slows time.
covid-19
virus

GeoHealth2020: Ming Su, Shushi Peng, Zhaomin Dong, et. al. A Warm Summer is Unlikely to Stop Transmission of COVID‐19 Naturally. GeoHealth 2020;4:e2020GH000292 10.1029/2020GH000292.

Authors
Affiliations

State Key Laboratory of Environmental Aquatic Chemistry, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Shushi Peng

Peking University

Lili Chen

Beijing Academy of Edge Computing (BAEC)

Bin Wang

Peking University

Ying Wang

School of Space and Environment, Beihang University

Xiarui Fan

School of Space and Environment, Beihang University

Zhaomin Dong

School of Space and Environment, Beihang University

Published

Dec 15, 2020

Doi

Abstract

The outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) showed various transmission rate (Rt) across different regions. The determination of the factors affecting transmission rate is urgent and crucial to combat COVID‐19. Here we explored variation of Rt between 277 regions across the globe and the associated potential socioeconomic, demographic, and environmental factors. At global scale, the Rt started to decrease approximately 2 weeks after policy interventions initiated. This lag from the date of policy interventions initiation to the date when Rt started to decrease ranges from 9 to 19 days, largest in Europe and North America. We find that proportion of elderly people or life expectancy can explain ~50% of variation in transmission rate across the 277 regions. The transmission rate at the point of inflection (RI) increases by 29.4% (25.2–34.0%) for 1% uptick in the proportion of people aged above 65, indicating that elderly people face ~2.5 times higher infection risk than younger people. Air temperature is negatively correlated with transmission rate, which is mainly attributed to collinearities between air temperature and demographic factors. Our model predicted that temperature sensitivity of RI is only−2.7% (−5.2–0%) per degree Celsius after excluding collinearities between air temperature and demographic factors. This low temperature sensitivity of RI suggests that a warm summer is unlikely to impede the spread of COVID‐19 naturally.

References

加入 Zotero

@article{su2020warm,
    title       = {A Warm Summer is Unlikely to Stop Transmission of COVID-19 Naturally},
    author      = {Su, Ming and Peng, Shushi and Chen, Lili and Wang, Bin and Wang, Ying and Fan, Xiarui and Dong, Zhaomin},
    year        = 2020,
    journal     = {GeoHealth},
    volume      = 4,
    pages       = {e2020GH000292},
    url         = {https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2020GH000292},
    number      = 12,
    doi         = {10.1029/2020GH000292},
    eprint      = {https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2020GH000292},
    note        = {e2020GH000292 2020GH000292}
}