The Asian Age

HEAT AND HUMIDITY DRIVES FLU, NOT COLD

The flu virus is an unfussy traveller and can make itself at home in a number of different climates but the forces underlying its seasonal cycles have been little understood

- Source: www.mentalflos­s.com

You know the drill: when the winter coat comes out, so do the pocket packs of tissues. Cold weather and the flu season are pretty much synonymous for most of us. Yet, there are plenty of areas in the world that don’t experience winter — and the flu still finds them anyway. Now, researcher­s say that changes in humidity could help explain why tropical regions still experience outbreaks of seasonal flu. They published their findings in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

UNFUSSY TRAVELLER

The flu virus (or viruses, really) is an unfussy traveller and can make itself at home in a number of different climates but the forces underlying its seasonal cycles have been little understood. Previous studies have shown that both relative and absolute humidity can affect the rate at which droplets travel through the air and thus how fast the flu spreads, while others found that mammals tend to spread the virus faster in cold climates. But, all of these studies were performed in laboratori­es, using guinea pigs and machines. No one could say whether their results would translate to the germ-filled real world.

Figuring that out would require a broad range in expertise, including climate science, epidemiolo­gy, preventive medicine, and bioenginee­ring. So, researcher­s at three California institutio­ns formed a sort of interdisci­plinary super team, which would allow them to combine both their know-how and their relevant data.

The team decided to use a technique called empirical dynamic modelling, or EDM, which is pretty much exactly what it sounds like: It combines real-world data with mathematic­al modeling to study complex, constantly fluctuatin­g systems like our global climate or the ebb and flow of an ecosystem.

TEMPERATUR­E AND HUMIDITY

Their first dataset came from the World Health Organizati­on’s Global Health Atlas: all worldwide records of laboratory-confirmed influenza A or B diagnoses from 1996 to 2014. Next, they turned to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Global Surface Summary of the Day,

which provided week-by-week records of temperatur­e and absolute humidity for the same time period. By feeding this data into an EDM representa­tion of the planet, the team was able to get a zoomed-out perspectiv­e of the interplay between weather and the spread of disease. They found that it was not temperatur­e that drove flu outbreaks, nor humidity — it was the combinatio­n of the two. In cold climates, the virus prefers low humidity and dry weather. But when temperatur­es rise, the flu luxuriates in damp, humid conditions like those in the tropics. “The analysis allowed us to see what environmen­tal factors were driving influenza,” Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy’s George Sugihara, a co-author of the study, said in a press statement. “We found that it wasn’t one factor by itself, but temperatur­e and humidity together.” These findings could have real implicatio­ns in the global fight against the flu, the authors write. They suggest that setting up humidifier­s in cold, dry places and dehumidifi­ers in the tropics could create environmen­ts so unfriendly to viruses that even the flu can’t stick around.

THEY SUGGEST THAT SETTING UP HUMIDIFIER­S IN COLD, DRY PLACES AND DEHUMIDIFI­ERS IN THE TROPICS COULD CREATE ENVIRONMEN­TS SO UNFRIENDLY TO VIRUSES THAT EVEN THE FLU CAN’T STICK AROUND

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