Scientific Reports (Apr 2021)

Structural equation modeling to shed light on the controversial role of climate on the spread of SARS-CoV-2

  • Alessia Spada,
  • Francesco Antonio Tucci,
  • Aldo Ummarino,
  • Paolo Pio Ciavarella,
  • Nicholas Calà,
  • Vincenzo Troiano,
  • Michele Caputo,
  • Raffaele Ianzano,
  • Silvia Corbo,
  • Marco de Biase,
  • Nicola Fascia,
  • Chiara Forte,
  • Giorgio Gambacorta,
  • Gabriele Maccione,
  • Giuseppina Prencipe,
  • Michele Tomaiuolo,
  • Antonio Tucci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-87113-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Climate seems to influence the spread of SARS-CoV-2, but the findings of the studies performed so far are conflicting. To overcome these issues, we performed a global scale study considering 134,871 virologic-climatic-demographic data (209 countries, first 16 weeks of the pandemic). To analyze the relation among COVID-19, population density, and climate, a theoretical path diagram was hypothesized and tested using structural equation modeling (SEM), a powerful statistical technique for the evaluation of causal assumptions. The results of the analysis showed that both climate and population density significantly influence the spread of COVID-19 (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively). Overall, climate outweighs population density (path coefficients: climate vs. incidence = 0.18, climate vs. prevalence = 0.11, population density vs. incidence = 0.04, population density vs. prevalence = 0.05). Among the climatic factors, irradiation plays the most relevant role, with a factor-loading of − 0.77, followed by temperature (− 0.56), humidity (0.52), precipitation (0.44), and pressure (0.073); for all p < 0.001. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that climatic factors significantly influence the spread of SARS-CoV-2. However, demographic factors, together with other determinants, can affect the transmission, and their influence may overcome the protective effect of climate, where favourable.