PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Feb 2021)

Limited role for meteorological factors on the variability in COVID-19 incidence: A retrospective study of 102 Chinese cities.

  • Ka Chun Chong,
  • Jinjun Ran,
  • Steven Yuk Fai Lau,
  • William Bernard Goggins,
  • Shi Zhao,
  • Pin Wang,
  • Linwei Tian,
  • Maggie Haitian Wang,
  • Kirran N Mohammad,
  • Lai Wei,
  • Xi Xiong,
  • Hengyan Liu,
  • Paul Kay Sheung Chan,
  • Huwen Wang,
  • Yawen Wang,
  • Jingxuan Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009056
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. e0009056

Abstract

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While many studies have focused on identifying the association between meteorological factors and the activity of COVID-19, we argue that the contribution of meteorological factors to a reduction of the risk of COVID-19 was minimal when the effects of control measures were taken into account. In this study, we assessed how much variability in COVID-19 activity is attributable to city-level socio-demographic characteristics, meteorological factors, and the control measures imposed. We obtained the daily incidence of COVID-19, city-level characteristics, and meteorological data from a total of 102 cities situated in 27 provinces/municipalities outside Hubei province in China from 1 January 2020 to 8 March 2020, which largely covers almost the first wave of the epidemic. Generalized linear mixed effect models were employed to examine the variance in the incidence of COVID-19 explained by different combinations of variables. According to the results, including the control measure effects in a model substantially raised the explained variance to 45%, which increased by >40% compared to the null model that did not include any covariates. On top of that, including temperature and relative humidity in the model could only result in < 1% increase in the explained variance even though the meteorological factors showed a statistically significant association with the incidence rate of COVID-19. In conclusion, we showed that very limited variability of the COVID-19 incidence was attributable to meteorological factors. Instead, the control measures could explain a larger proportion of variance.