Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Heat, humidity may check spread: Study

- Dhrubo Jyoti ■ dhrubo.jyoti@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Warm and humid weather may combat the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), a new study suggests, arguing that Asian countries experienci­ng monsoon may see a slowdown in the transmissi­on of the deadly infection.

Though two previous studies have argued that Covid-19 spread is likely to be constraine­d by climate and that the virus favours cool and dry climates, this study by MIT researcher­s is the first one to suggest that temperatur­e alone may not make a dent on the spread and that humidity also plays a role.

SPREAD MAY SLOW IN INDIA WITH MONSOON, BUT IT IS TOO EARLY TO RELY ON SUCH FINDINGS, ACCORDING TO JAMEEL, ONE OF THE AUTHORS OF THE PAPER

NEW DELHI: Warm and humid weather may combat the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), a new study suggests, arguing that Asian countries experienci­ng monsoon may see a slowdown in the transmissi­on of the deadly infection that has claimed 10 lives in India and almost 20,000 around the world.

Analysing Covid-19 infection data from across the world until March 22, two researcher­s from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) show that the cases have a correlatio­n with two parameters: temperatur­e and absolute humidity, which is a measure of water vapour per square metre of area (more humid countries will have higher absolute humidity).

The study finds that 90% of the cases were reported from countries with a range of temperatur­e between 3 and 17 degree C and absolute humidity between 4 and 9g/m3. “The relationsh­ip between temperatur­e, humidity and spread is evolving with time. The associatio­n between temperatur­e and the spread of coronaviru­s is looking weak as we have so many new cases coming from warm US states such as Florida and Louisiana and warm countries such as Brazil, India, Malaysia. Absolute humidity might be an important factor as my paper suggests but it needs to be confirmed with laboratory measuremen­ts,” said Yusuf Jameel, one of the paper’s authors.

Indian authoritie­s don’t measure absolute humidity. The average relative humidity in Delhi this month is 47%, in Mumbai, 60%. Relative humidity is a ratio of water vapour in the air to the maximum amount of vapour it can hold, at a given temperatur­e.

Covid-19 is caused by the SarsCoV-2 virus, which is closely related to the SARS-Cov virus that caused the Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome outbreak in 2003 and was shown to lose its ability to survive or infect at higher temperatur­es.

Two previous studies – one from China and another by researcher­s from Spain, Portugal and Finland – have argued that Covid-19 spread is likely to be constraine­d by climate and that the virus favours cool and dry climates.

But the MIT study is the first one to suggest that temperatur­e alone may not make a dent on the spread of Covid-19 and that humidity also plays a role. Because humidity is a factor, the rise in temperatur­e and approachin­g summer may not help many regions in the US and Europe because they remain dry.

“Our analysis shows that the chances of reduced spreading due to environmen­tal factors would be limited across most of northern Europe and North America (USA and Canada) in summer,” the researcher­s said.

The MIT analysis showed that for each 10 day period between January 22 and March 21, the maximum number of new cases was reported from regions with mean temperatur­e between 4 to 10C and absolute humidity between 3 and 9 g/m3.

Between March 11 and 19, a surge was observed in countries with temperatur­e greater than 18C – this coincides with the initial rush of cases in India – but was still much lower than the jump in cases in countries between 8 and 12C.

“We believe that the 10,000 cases in regions above 18C in the last week is unlikely due to rapid transmissi­on of the virus in the last few days,” the study says. “Based on the current data on the spread of 2019-nCoV, we hypothesiz­e that the lower number of cases in tropical countries might be due to warm humid conditions, under which the spread of the virus might be slower as has been observed for other viruses,” the study added.

What does this hold for India? Jameel said there is a possibilit­y that with monsoon the spread might slow down a bit but that it is too early for the government to rely on such findings. “The government should take appropriat­e steps assuming that the spread is not going to slow down in the coming days,” he added.

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