The New Zealand Herald

A hot topic

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Will the virus retreat in hot weather?

No one knows. The new coronaviru­s was identified only in late December and most scientists say there is simply no data to suggest the Covid-19 cases will start declining in warmer weather. “We have to assume that the virus will continue to have the capacity to spread, and it’s a false hope to say yes, it will just disappear in the summertime like influenza,” said Dr Michael Ryan, the World Health Organisati­on’s emergencie­s chief. Dr Dale Fisher, a senior consultant in infectious diseases at the National University of Singapore, was similarly unconvince­d that hot weather would significan­tly slow its spread. “Maybe after it’s been around for a few years and most of the world has had it, maybe then it will settle into a more flu-like pattern,” he said. “Since we have no natural immunity to this, we’re all much more vulnerable, no matter what the weather is.”

But Dr Mohammad Sajadi, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Maryland, thinks weather might play a role. He and colleagues found a striking temperatur­e similarity among regions with sustained outbreaks of Covid-19: between 5C and 11C. “If we’re right about seasonalit­y, that could help with surveillan­ce and other public health measures.”

How have related viruses behaved?

The new virus is geneticall­y related to Sars and Mers. Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (Sars) first broke out in China in late 2002 and ultimately sickened about 8000 people worldwide before it was declared contained in July 2003. But the arrival of summer wasn’t what stopped Sars. Extraordin­ary measures that included shutting down travel from epicentres in Asia and Canada and a mass culling of palm civets that spread the disease to humans were largely credited for curbing the disease. Although the transmissi­on of Middle Eastern Respirator­y Syndrome (Mers) has never been entirely interrupte­d, its spread to humans from camels is mostly sporadic, sparking limited outbreaks since being identified in 2012. “I don’t think there’s anything we can say about seasonalit­y and the coronaviru­s based on what we’ve seen with Sars and Mers,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Centre for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Why hasn’t the virus caused Southern Hemisphere epidemics?

It could be too early; past pandemics have sometimes taken months to reach every country in the world. Surveillan­ce might also be an issue. The symptoms of Covid19 are similar to those for numerous other diseases, including flu, measles and malaria, so detecting cases of the new virus is challengin­g. Benjamin Cowling, head of the Epidemiolo­gy and Biostatist­ics Division at the School of Public Health at Hong Kong University, said he suspects wider outbreaks exist in countries that already have confirmed cases, such as Thailand and Vietnam. “Most of the typically hot countries, we think, have not been testing as aggressive­ly as some of the colder ones have been,” he said. Cowling also said that how people behave in winter environmen­ts is likely having an effect. “People are more likely to spend time indoors in colder weather than they are in the summer. More time indoors means that people are more likely to be in the same rooms together and thus get infected.” But, Cowling said: “I don’t think we can count on it stopping in the summer. It may slow down, but it won’t be stopped. At this rate, we would expect every country in the world to have cases in about nine months. We’re headed towards that now.”

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