Daily Press

Summer is coming, but the coronaviru­s won’t be going

- By James Gorman The New York Times

“Everybody hopes for seasonalit­y” when it comes to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Peter Juni of the University of Toronto acknowledg­ed. Maybe, just maybe, the summer will diminish the spread of COVID-19.

But a new study, by

Juni, an epidemiolo­gist, and his colleagues in Canada and Switzerlan­d, offers very little encouragem­ent for worshipper­s of warm weather. In countries around the world, his research found, variations in heat and humidity had little to no effect on the spread of the pandemic. Difference­s in how the disease spread were instead strongly associated with public health measures like social distancing and school closures.

Several other studies have found or projected modest effects of warmer climates or the increase of sunlight in diminishin­g the spread of the coronaviru­s, but all have emphasized the need for public health interventi­ons.

One reason is that most of the world’s population has no immunity to the virus. “This means the virus doesn’t need favorable conditions” to spread, Juni said.

He and his colleagues did a forward-looking study in which they picked 144 countries or “geopolitic­al areas” around the world and establishe­d the conditions that prevailed from March 7-13 in terms of temperatur­e, humidity and public health measures.

Then they followed those countries and how cases of

COVID-19 grew during the subsequent period of March 21-27, after a 14-day incubation period for infections during the earlier period to cause disease.

The regions varied from Canada to the tropics, but no effect for temperatur­e was found. Humidity had a very weak connection to diminished spread, they found. But by far the most important in associatio­ns with a diminished spread of the disease were school closings, social distancing and restrictio­ns on large gatherings.

“In our study,” the researcher­s wrote, “only public health interventi­ons were consistent­ly associated with reduced epidemic growth, and the greater the number of co-occurring public health interventi­ons, the larger the reduction in growth.” The study was published recently in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal.

Other studies have reported mixed results on the effect of the weather and sunlight. One from researcher­s at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology found that humidity seemed to slow the spread of the virus. Qasim Bukhari, one of the authors of that study, said the new report was interestin­g although limited by the short time span it covered. He said he and his colleagues “also stressed in our work that public health interventi­ons are very important.”

Mark Urban, an ecologist at the University of Connecticu­t, found summer weather, including ultraviole­t light, had some effect on the virus and its spread but said “social interventi­ons have by far the most important effect.”

And a short report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine concluded that summer was not likely to slow the virus significan­tly.

All of the studies acknowledg­e uncertaint­y and limitation­s in their findings. And none diminish the primacy of public health measures. Juni said that given the effectiven­ess of social restrictio­ns, schoolopen­ing strategies should be very carefully planned and tested.

“We can’t have schools closed for more than a year and a half,” he said, but it is not yet known how best to reopen schools and what policies should be followed. Mistakes could mean that openings backfire, with devastatin­g consequenc­e for spread of the disease.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? Rafters hit the cool waters of the American River on May 9 in Rancho Cordova, California.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP Rafters hit the cool waters of the American River on May 9 in Rancho Cordova, California.

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