No Effects of Meteorological Factors on the SARS-CoV-2 Infection Fatality Rate.
COVID-19
Climate
Infection fatality rate
SARS-CoV-2
Temperature
Weather
Journal
Biomedical and environmental sciences : BES
ISSN: 2214-0190
Titre abrégé: Biomed Environ Sci
Pays: China
ID NLM: 8909524
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
20 Nov 2021
20 Nov 2021
Historique:
received:
21
01
2021
accepted:
12
04
2021
entrez:
27
12
2021
pubmed:
28
12
2021
medline:
1
1
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Previous studies have shown that meteorological factors may increase COVID-19 mortality, likely due to the increased transmission of the virus. However, this could also be related to an increased infection fatality rate (IFR). We investigated the association between meteorological factors (temperature, humidity, solar irradiance, pressure, wind, precipitation, cloud coverage) and IFR across Spanish provinces ( We estimated IFR as excess deaths (the gap between observed and expected deaths, considering COVID-19-unrelated deaths prevented by lockdown measures) divided by the number of infections (SARS-CoV-2 seropositive individuals plus excess deaths) and conducted Spearman correlations between meteorological factors and IFR across the provinces. We estimated 2,418,250 infections and 43,237 deaths. The IFR was 0.03% in < 50-year-old, 0.22% in 50-59-year-old, 0.9% in 60-69-year-old, 3.3% in 70-79-year-old, 12.6% in 80-89-year-old, and 26.5% in ≥ 90-year-old. We did not find statistically significant relationships between meteorological factors and adjusted IFR. However, we found strong relationships between low temperature and unadjusted IFR, likely due to Spain's colder provinces' aging population. The association between meteorological factors and adjusted COVID-19 IFR is unclear. Neglecting age differences or ignoring COVID-19-unrelated deaths may severely bias COVID-19 epidemiological analyses.
Identifiants
pubmed: 34955147
doi: 10.3967/bes2021.120
pmc: PMC8690129
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
871-880Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2021 The Editorial Board of Biomedical and Environmental Sciences. Published by China CDC. All rights reserved.
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