Litcius/Paper detail

Climatic factors influence the spread of COVID-19 in Russia

Malay Pramanik, Parmeshwar Udmale, Praffulit Bisht, Koushik Chowdhury, Sylvia Szabo, Indrajit Pal

2020International Journal of Environmental Health Research84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The study is the first attempt to assess the role of climatic predictors in the rise of COVID-19 intensity in the Russian climatic region. The study used the Random Forest algorithm to understand the underlying associations and monthly scenarios. The results show that temperature seasonality (29.2 ± 0.9%) has the highest contribution for COVID-19 transmission in the humid continental region. In comparison, the diurnal temperature range (26.8 ± 0.4%) and temperature seasonality (14.6 ± 0.8%) had the highest impacts in the sub-arctic region. Our results also show that September and October have favorable climatic conditions for the COVID-19 spread in the sub-arctic and humid continental regions, respectively. From June to August, the high favorable zone for the spread of the disease will shift towards the sub-arctic region from the humid continental region. The study suggests that the government should implement strict measures for these months to prevent the second wave of COVID-19 outbreak in Russia.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)ArcticSeasonalityClimatologyOutbreakGeographyThe arcticRange (aeronautics)Diurnal temperature variationEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyMeteorologyOceanographyGeologyEcologyBiologyDiseaseMedicineComposite materialVirologyPathologyMaterials scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)COVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 diagnosis using AICOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts