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Ambient air pollution, meteorology, and COVID‐19 infection in Korea

Tung Hoang, Tho Thi Anh Tran

2020Journal of Medical Virology68 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The outbreak of novel pneumonia coronavirus disease has become a public health concern worldwide. Here, for the first time, the association between Korean meteorological factors and air pollutants and the COVID‐19 infection was investigated. Data of air pollutants, meteorological factors, and daily COVID‐19 confirmed cases of seven metropolitan cities and nine provinces were obtained from 3 February 2020 to 5 May 2020 during the first wave of pandemic across Korea. We applied the generalized additive model to investigate the temporal relationship. There was a significantly nonlinear association between daily temperature and COVID‐19 confirmed cases. Each 1°C increase in temperature was associated with 9% (lag 0‐14; OR = 1.09; 95% CI = 1.03‐1.15) increase of COVID‐19 confirmed cases when the temperature was below 8°C. A 0.01 ppm increase in NO 2 (lag 0‐7, lag 0.14, and lag 0‐21) was significantly associated with increases of COVID‐19 confirmed cases, with ORs (95% CIs) of 1.13 (1.02‐1.25), 1.19 (1.09‐1.30), and 1.30 (1.19‐1.41), respectively. A 0.1 ppm increase in CO (lag 0‐21) was associated with the increase in COVID‐19 confirmed cases (OR = 1.10, 95% CI = 1.04‐1.16). There was a positive association between per 0.001 ppm of SO 2 concentration (lag 0, lag 0‐7, and lag 0‐14) and COVID‐19 confirmed cases, with ORs (95% CIs) of 1.13 (1.04‐1.22), 1.20 (1.11‐1.31), and 1.15 (1.07‐1.25), respectively. There were significantly temporal associations between temperature, NO 2 , CO, and SO 2 concentrations and daily COVID‐19 confirmed cases in Korea.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)LagOutbreakLag timeAir pollutantsDistributed lagSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)PneumoniaPandemicAir pollutionGeneralized additive model2019-20 coronavirus outbreakPublic healthMedicineDemographyVirologyChemistryInternal medicineMathematicsBiologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)StatisticsComputer networkOrganic chemistryBiological systemNursingSociologyComputer scienceCOVID-19 impact on air qualityAir Quality and Health ImpactsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies
Ambient air pollution, meteorology, and COVID‐19 infection in Korea | Litcius