GLOBAL COVID-19 TRANSMISSION AND MORTALITY - INFLUENCE OF HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT, CLIMATE AND CLIMATE CHANGE ON EARLY PHASE OF THE PANDEMIC.
- Hariprasad Thazhathedath,
- Anish TS,
- RETHEESH K HARIDASAN,
- Dennis Robert,
- Sriram Venkitaraman,
- Sorna narayanan,
- Pratheesh C Mammen,
- Sekhar L Kuriakose
Anish TS
Associate Professor, Department of community medicine
Author ProfileRETHEESH K HARIDASAN
Associate professor, Department of community medicine
Author ProfileSriram Venkitaraman
Department of Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of Kerala
Author ProfilePratheesh C Mammen
KSDMA - UNICEF Partnership, Kerala State Disaster Management Authority
Author ProfileSekhar L Kuriakose
Member Secretary KSDMA & Head SEOC, Kerala State Disaster Management Authority.
Author ProfileAbstract
Many of the respiratory pathogens show seasonal patterns and association
with environmental factors. In this article, we conducted a
cross-sectional analysis of the influence of environmental factors,
including climate change along with development indicators on the
differential global spread and fatality of COVID-19 during its early
phase. We used the published COVID-19 data by the WHO for April. Global
climate data we used are monthly averaged gridded datasets of
Temperature, Humidity and Temperature Anomaly. We used the HDI to
account for all other socioeconomic factors that can affect the disease
spread and mortality and build a negative binomial regression model. The
temperature has a negative association with COVID-19 mortality. However,
HDI is shown to confound the effect of temperature on the reporting of
the disease. Temperature anomaly, which is being regarded as a global
warming indicator, is positively associated with the pandemic's spread
and mortality. Viewing newer infectious diseases like SARS-CoV-2 in the
perspective of climate change has a lot of public health implications,
and it necessitates further research.