Abstract

ABSTRACT.The complexity of transmission of COVID-19 in the human population cannot be overstated. Although major transmission routes of COVID-19 remain as human-to-human interactions, understanding the possible role of climatic and weather processes in accelerating such interactions is still a challenge. The majority of studies on the transmission of this disease have suggested a positive association between a decrease in ambient air temperature and an increase in human cases. Using data from 19 early epicenters, we show that the relationship between the incidence of COVID-19 and temperature is a complex function of prevailing climatic conditions influencing human behavior that govern virus transmission dynamics. We note that under a dry (low-moisture) environment, notably at dew point temperatures below 0°C, the incidence of the disease was highest. Prevalence of the virus in the human population, when ambient air temperatures were higher than 24°C or lower than 17°C, was hypothesized to be a function of the interaction between humans and the built or ambient environment. An ambient air temperature range of 17 to 24°C was identified, within which virus transmission appears to decrease, leading to a reduction in COVID-19 human cases.

Highlights

  • On December 27, 2019, a local hospital in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, notified the Chinese Center for Disease Control and relevant health commissions of a mysterious pneumonic disease cluster

  • The literature suggests symptoms for COVID-19 begin to appear in humans within a median range of 4.1 days of exposure,[14] and for this study, we used a 4-day running average for air and dew point temperatures

  • The other two outbreak epicenters included in this study (Tehran, Iran, and Munich, Germany) revealed consistent climatic conditions (Figure 1)—namely, negative dew point temperature prior to the COVID-19 outbreak (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

On December 27, 2019, a local hospital in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, notified the Chinese Center for Disease Control and relevant health commissions of a mysterious pneumonic disease cluster. Observations based on actual COVID-19 occurring in humans at different locations (e.g., within the United States, India, China) indicate that warm temperature may have a similar impact on prevalence of the disease, creating a paradox. It raises a critical question concerning the role and relationship of ambient air and dew point temperatures and incidence of COVID-19, which comprise the

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