温度与COVID-19发病率:生态学研究

IF 1.4 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of research in health sciences Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.32598/jrh.13.2.2052.1
Alireza Mirahmadizadeh, Alireza Heiran, Abdolrasool Hemmati, Mehrzad Lotfi, Mahsa Akbari, Alireza Forouzanrad, Roya Sahebi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:根据假设,COVID-19在温暖气候地区的流行程度较低。矛盾的结果促使我们研究温度与COVID-19累积发病率之间的相关性。方法:从伊朗法尔斯省的CRONALAB、COVID-DASHBOARD和MCMC数据库中获取COVID-19数据,将数据进行链接并最终确定每日COVID-19病例。每日气温数据来自伊朗南部法尔斯省每个县2020年3月21日至2021年3月21日的气象站报告。分别计算各县新冠肺炎日加权累计发病率。最初,为了实现统一的数据可视化,将平均气温数据转换为排名的百分位数。然后,以温度百分位数显示COVID-19累积发病率的分布,以直观地评估研究假设。考虑到数据的非线性分布,我们使用广义加性模型和局部加权(多项式)回归进行探索性分析,以选择最佳响应函数。然后,采用广义线性模型对模型进行参数化建立。结果:广义加性模型显示,COVID-19发病率随温度的变化呈小幅度下降,接近水平线性(拟R2: 0.001,偏差解释:0.13%,系数:-0.02)。在类似的赤池信息标准(aic)(34945)的支持下,glm显示出正面的结果(偏差解释:0.13%,系数:-0.02)。然而,根据局部加权回归模型的曲线,当温度在60至80个百分位数之间时,即在寒冷气候中为20°C至25°C,在温暖气候中为25°C至35°C时,COVID-19发病率较低。这是在较低和较高温度下速率增加的情况。结论:在伊朗南部地区,每日COVID-19发病率不能解释为日气温的函数。在20°C至25°C的低温和25°C至35°C的温暖气候范围内,疾病传播率较高,可能与人们在室内聚集,再加上通风不足有关。
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Temperature and COVID-19 Incidence: An Ecologic Study
Background: According to the hypothesis, COVID-19 is less prevalent in regions with warm climates. Contradictory results have led us to investigate the correlation between temperature and the cumulative COVID-19 incidence rate. Methods: We obtained COVID-19 data from CRONALAB, COVID-DASHBOARD, and MCMC databases of Fars Province, Iran, linked the data and finalized daily COVID-19 cases. The daily data on the temperature was gotten from meteorological stations’ reports from March 21, 2020, to March 21, 2021, for each county of Fars Province, Southern Iran. The daily weighted cumulative incidence rate of COVID-19 cases was calculated for all counties, separately. Initially, for uniform data visualization, the average air temperature data were transformed into ranked percentiles. Then, to visually assess the study hypothesis, the distribution of COVID-19 cumulative incidence was visualized on percentiles of temperature. Given the non-linear distribution of the data, we performed exploratory analyses using the generalized additive models and locally weighted (polynomial) regressions to choose the best response function. Then, the generalized linear models were used to parametrically build the model. Results: The generalized additive models showed a small decreasing, near horizontal, linear pattern for COVID-19 incidence rate as the function of temperature (pseudo R2: 0.001, deviance explained: 0.13%, coefficient: -0.02). The GLMs showed head-to-head results (deviance explained: 0.13%, coefficient: -0.02], supported by similar Akaike information criteria (AICs) (34945). However, according to the locally weighted regressions model’s curve, lower COVID-19 incidence rates were recorded on days when the temperatures ranged from 60 to 80 percentiles, equal to 20°C to 25°C in a cold climate and 25°C to 35°C in a warm climate. This is while the rates increased at lower and upper temperatures. Conclusion: Daily COVID-19 incidence rate cannot be explained as a function of daily temperature in Southern parts of Iran. Higher rates of disease transmission out of the range of 20°C to 25°C for cold temperatures and 25°C to 35°C for warm climates might be linked to people’s indoor gatherings, coupled with insufficient ventilation.
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来源期刊
Journal of research in health sciences
Journal of research in health sciences PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
13.30%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: The Journal of Research in Health Sciences (JRHS) is the official journal of the School of Public Health; Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, which is published quarterly. Since 2017, JRHS is published electronically. JRHS is a peer-reviewed, scientific publication which is produced quarterly and is a multidisciplinary journal in the field of public health, publishing contributions from Epidemiology, Biostatistics, Public Health, Occupational Health, Environmental Health, Health Education, and Preventive and Social Medicine. We do not publish clinical trials, nursing studies, animal studies, qualitative studies, nutritional studies, health insurance, and hospital management. In addition, we do not publish the results of laboratory and chemical studies in the field of ergonomics, occupational health, and environmental health
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