Global COVID-19 pandemic trends and their relationship with meteorological variables, air pollutants and socioeconomic aspects

被引:15
|
作者
Han, Yi [1 ,2 ]
Zhao, Wenwu [1 ,2 ]
Pereira, Paulo [3 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China
[2] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, Inst Land Surface Syst & Sustainable Dev, 19 Xinjiekou Wai St, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China
[3] Mykolas Romeris Univ, Environm Management Ctr, Ateities G 20, LT-08303 Vilnius, Lithuania
关键词
COVID-19; Meteorological variables; Air pollutants; Socioeconomic aspects; GeoDetector; Boosted regression tree; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS; POLLUTION; CONTEXT;
D O I
10.1016/j.envres.2021.112249
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Meteorological variables, air pollutants, and socioeconomic factors are associated with COVID-19 transmission. However, it is unclear what impact their interactions have on COVID-19 transmission, whether their impact on COVID-19 transmission is linear or non-linear, and where the inflexion points are. This study examined 1) the spatial and temporal trends in COVID-19 monthly infection rate of new confirmed cases per 100,000 people (Rn) in 188 countries/regions worldwide from March to November 2020; 2) the linear correlation between meteorological variables (temperature (T), rainfall (R), wind speed (WS), relative humidity (RH), air pressure (AP)), air pollutants (nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), carbon monoxide (CO), ozone (O3)) and socioeconomic aspects (population density (PD), gross domestic product per capita (GDP), domestic general government health expenditure per capita (GHE)) and Rn, and 3) the interaction and non-linear effects of the different variables on Rn, based on GeoDetector and Boosted regression tree. The results showed that the global Rn had was spatially clustered, and the average Rn increased From March to November 2020. Global Rn was negatively correlated with meteorological variables (T, R, WS, AP) and positively correlated with air pollutants (NO2, SO2, O3) and socioeconomic aspects (GDP, GHE). The interaction of SO2 and O3, SO2 and RH, and O3 and T strongly affected Rn. The variables effect on COVID-19 transmission was non-linear, with one or more inflexion points. The findings of this work can provide a basis for developing a global response to COVID-19 for global sustainable development.
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页数:11
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