Sunday, November 14, 2021

The impact of weather on COVID-19 pandemic

Abstract

Rising temperature levels during spring and summer are often argued to enable lifting of strict containment measures even in the absence of herd immunity. Despite broad scholarly interest in the relationship between weather and coronavirus spread, previous studies come to very mixed results. To contribute to this puzzle, the paper examines the impact of weather on the COVID-19 pandemic using a unique granular dataset of over 1.2 million daily observations covering over 3700 counties in nine countries for all seasons of 2020. Our results show that temperature and wind speed have a robust negative effect on virus spread after controlling for a range of potential confounding factors. These effects, however, are substantially larger during mealtimes, as well as in periods of high mobility and low containment, suggesting an important role for social behaviour.

Introduction

The effect of weather on the spread of the coronavirus is one of the most investigated research questions since the onset of the pandemic1,2,3. Like other epidemic diseases, the trajectories in many countries show strong seasonal patterns with fewer cases during summer and more during winter. Although a range of studies has provided empirical evidence for the negative relationship between temperature and contagion4,5,6,7,8,9,10, several scholars come to contrasting conclusions by showing that the containment potential of weather differs substantially with respect to effect sizes, significance levels, weather indicators, regions, and time periods11,12,13,14,15.

Weather can influence virus contagion in two distinct ways. From an epidemiological standpoint, the survival and spread of a virus depends on the temperature of its environment. Since higher temperatures harm the lipid layer of the virus10,16,17, the viability of the SARS Coronavirus is substantially impaired at higher temperature levels18. From a behavioral perspective, weather alters mobility levels, social distancing, and location of social gatherings, which in turn affects the spread of the virus across individuals19,20,21. Thus, while the epidemiological channel implies lower cases during higher temperatures, the direction of the effect of weather through the social channel is not clear a priori, which may explain the conflicting results of previous empirical studies.

To investigate the weather-pandemic nexus, we collect a unique dataset covering 3376 counties in 114 states/regions from nine countries (Austria, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, and the United States) between 1st of January 2020 and 31st of December 2020, at a daily frequency. Using over 1.2 million observations and coverage of all seasons of the year, we examine the effect of weather on three alternative indicators22,23 which aim to capture the pandemic situation within a county on a given date: (1) (log) new cases; (2) number of new cases within the last 14 days per 100,000 habitants (notification rate); (3) (log) cases. As climatic indicators, we use hourly weather variables24 capturing: (1) temperature; (2) relative humidity; (3) wind speed; and (4) total precipitation in each county at a given date.

To quantify the effect of these weather variables, we use state-of-the-art econometric techniques that enable us to exploit comprehensive cross-county and within-county variation and achieve very high statistical precision in the empirical estimates. Such an exceptional regional granularity allows us to control for unobserved heterogeneity across counties—such as cultural factors—and regional-time-varying factors affecting the evolution of the pandemic—such as the imposition of lockdown measures, mask requirements and other factors affecting social distancing. In addition, we extend the literature by exploring alternative time lags between weather and virus cases—to take the delay between infection and reporting into account—and the effect of temperature at different hours of the day. This is essential since, as we show, weather affects contagion differently throughout the day depending on human activity (i.e. work, social gatherings).

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The impact of weather on COVID-19 pandemic | Scientific Reports (nature.com)

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