Qatar Environment and Energy Research Institute, Hamad Bin Khalifa University - Qatar Foundation, Doha, Qatar.
Transvalor S.A, Sophia Antipolis, France.
PLoS One. 2022 Sep 7;17(9):e0273078. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273078. eCollection 2022.
A growing number of studies suggest that climate may impact the spread of COVID-19. This hypothesis is supported by data from similar viral contagions, such as SARS and the 1918 Flu Pandemic, and corroborated by US influenza data. However, the extent to which climate may affect COVID-19 transmission rates and help modeling COVID-19 risk is still not well understood. This study demonstrates that such an understanding is attainable through the development of regression models that verify how climate contributes to modeling COVID-19 transmission, and the use of feature importance techniques that assess the relative weight of meteorological variables compared to epidemiological, socioeconomic, environmental, and global health factors. The ensuing results show that meteorological factors play a key role in regression models of COVID-19 risk, with ultraviolet radiation (UV) as the main driver. These results are corroborated by statistical correlation analyses and a panel data fixed-effect model confirming that UV radiation coefficients are significantly negatively correlated with COVID-19 transmission rates.
越来越多的研究表明,气候可能会影响 COVID-19 的传播。这一假设得到了 SARS 和 1918 年流感大流行等类似病毒传染病数据的支持,并得到了美国流感数据的证实。然而,气候在多大程度上影响 COVID-19 的传播率以及有助于 COVID-19 风险建模仍未被很好地理解。本研究通过开发回归模型来证明这种理解是可行的,这些模型验证了气候如何有助于建模 COVID-19 的传播,以及使用特征重要性技术来评估气象变量与流行病学、社会经济、环境和全球健康因素相比的相对权重。由此产生的结果表明,气象因素在 COVID-19 风险的回归模型中起着关键作用,紫外线(UV)辐射是主要驱动因素。这些结果得到了统计相关性分析和面板数据固定效应模型的证实,该模型证实了 UV 辐射系数与 COVID-19 传播率呈显著负相关。