Houston Chronicle Sunday

Researcher­s tie air quality to severity of COVID-19

- By Jordan Wilkerson

University of Texas at Dallas researcher­s are examining the connection between Texas air quality and the severity of COVID-19 in certain Lone Star counties.

The researcher­s are taking advantage of satellites that orbit Earth every day, collecting informatio­n about our planet and monitoring air quality. During the global outbreak of COVID, a disease that attacks the lungs, understand­ing air quality may help predict the severity of COVID outbreaks over large swaths of Texas, the researcher­s found.

Their work, recently presented at an internatio­nal conference for computer scientists, was funded as part of a larger effort by NASA to encourage scientists to use the government agency’s satellite data to study the pandemic.

The UT Dallas team looked at how well three aspects of Texas air might serve as predictors of COVID severity in a given county: temperatur­e, relative humidity and the amount of tiny particles, or aerosols, in the air.

They combined satellite air quality data with COVID hospitaliz­ation rates and fed that data into a complex computer program relying on geometric deep learning techniques, in collaborat­ion with scientists at NASA. They found that relative humidity and aerosol concentrat­ion largely improved prediction­s of hospitaliz­ation rates across Texas in 2020. Air temperatur­e showed little to no connection with COVID severity.

For the study, the research team used temperatur­e and relative humidity observatio­ns provided by NASA’s Aqua satellite, while aerosol concentrat­ion measuremen­ts were provided by the agency’s Terra satellite.

These satellites only examine Texas a couple of times each week, making it tough to do a county-level assessment of air quality and COVID. As a workaround, the scientists averaged these satellite measuremen­ts over the past 20 years to create more of a climatolog­ical image of Texas air.

Aerosols — any microscopi­c particle that gets suspended in the air — were a prime choice for the study because they are frequently connected to air pollution (though they can also be natural like mist and dust).

The air pollutants emitted, such as from cars, “create a lot of chemical reactions in the atmosphere and produce aerosols. That has an impact on us,” said Ignacio Dominguez, a computer scientist at UT Dallas and lead author of the study.

There has already been reason to believe that these pollutants may worsen COVID symptoms.

“We know that when air quality is poor here in North Texas, we see more emergency department visits for asthma,” said Dr. John Carlo, a public health physician in Dallas and a member of the Texas Medical Associatio­n COVID-19 Task Force.

“We also know that asthma is one of the conditions that is known to cause more likelihood of coronaviru­s severity,” said Carlo, who was not involved with the study. “You have two interrelat­ionships. But can you make the bridge from air quality to COVID-19 severity? I don’t know the answer to that. It’s an important question to be asking.”

Meanwhile, relative humidity more likely affects how well the coronaviru­s can survive.

But understand­ing exactly why humidity and COVID severity are linked requires much more work. While the flu virus thrives in less humid environmen­ts, the novel coronaviru­s may behave differentl­y, said Carlo. At this point, scientists just aren’t sure. “That is very complex and very interestin­g science that I think we’re going to learn a lot more from. We are very early on in our understand­ing of that,” he said.

NASA is interested in more studies that use their atmospheri­c observatio­ns to probe public health problems, particular­ly as the frequency of pandemics are projected to increase.

“When people hear about NASA, they think about the Mars rover touching down on the surface of Mars or sending astronauts to an internatio­nal space station,” said Kyo Lee, an atmospheri­c scientist at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a co-author of the study. But with the COVID pandemic, the government agency is encouragin­g more scientists to ask, “How can NASA data benefit society and people living on Earth? We are also part of the Earth system. That aligns well with NASA’s overarchin­g goal.”

 ?? NASA ?? UT Dallas researcher­s use temperatur­e and relative humidity observatio­ns by NASA’s Aqua satellite, while aerosol concentrat­ion measuremen­ts were provided by the agency’s Terra satellite.
NASA UT Dallas researcher­s use temperatur­e and relative humidity observatio­ns by NASA’s Aqua satellite, while aerosol concentrat­ion measuremen­ts were provided by the agency’s Terra satellite.

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