Abstract

Mobility restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic ostensibly prevented the public from transmitting the disease in public places, but they also hampered outdoor recreation, despite the importance of blue-green spaces (e.g., parks and natural areas) for physical and mental health. We assess whether restrictions on human movement, particularly in blue-green spaces, affected the transmission of COVID-19. Our assessment uses a spatially resolved dataset of COVID-19 case numbers for 848 administrative units across 153 countries during the first year of the pandemic (February 2020 to February 2021). We measure mobility in blue-green spaces with planetary-scale aggregate and anonymized mobility flows derived from mobile phone tracking data. We then use machine learning forecast models and linear mixed-effects models to explore predictors of COVID-19 growth rates. After controlling for a number of environmental factors, we find no evidence that increased visits to blue-green space increase COVID-19 transmission. By contrast, increases in the total mobility and relaxation of other non-pharmaceutical interventions such as containment and closure policies predict greater transmission. Ultraviolet radiation stands out as the strongest environmental mitigant of COVID-19 spread, while temperature, humidity, wind speed, and ambient air pollution have little to no effect. Taken together, our analyses produce little evidence to support public health policies that restrict citizens from outdoor mobility in blue-green spaces, which corroborates experimental studies showing low risk of outdoor COVID-19 transmission. However, we acknowledge and discuss some of the challenges of big data approaches to ecological regression analyses such as this, and outline promising directions and opportunities for future research.

Highlights

  • During 2020, governments around the world took measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, including non-pharmaceutical interventions that enforced social distancing within the population [1]

  • We find that mobility in blue-green spaces is a weak predictor of COVID-19 growth rates, whereas total mobility, stringency of non-pharmaceutical interventions and ultraviolet radiation are strong predictors

  • Our global-scale modelling study provides supporting evidence for local-scale experimental and observational studies [15,16], which show that higher mobility in outdoor blue-green spaces is not associated with enhanced risk of COVID-19 transmission

Read more

Summary

Introduction

During 2020, governments around the world took measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, including non-pharmaceutical interventions that enforced social distancing within the population [1]. In some countries (e.g., Italy), stringent interventions such as stay-at-home or shelter-in-place policies restricted human mobility to indoor residential environments, and resulted in significant reductions in visitation to blue-green spaces (nonbuilt-up areas, such as parks, watercourses, and natural areas, often used for recreation) [2,3,4]. In other countries (e.g., Norway), less severe mobility restrictions allowed citizens to be mobile outdoors while maintaining physical distance and taking personal precautions, including wearing masks and washing hands [5,6,7]. Given the negative consequences that social distancing and home confinement can have on mental and physical health.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call