Leveraging weather data for forecasting cases-to-mortality rates due to COVID-19

被引:8
|
作者
Iloanusi, Ogechukwu [1 ]
Ross, Arun [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nigeria, Dept Elect Engn, Nsukka 410001, Enugu State, Nigeria
[2] Michigan State Univ, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
关键词
COVID-19; COVID-19 cases-to-mortality ratios; Regression analysis; Forecasting; Weather conditions; Temperature; Solar irradiation; Rainfall; Relative humidity; Deep learning; Random forest; PREDICTION; SPREAD; MODEL;
D O I
10.1016/j.chaos.2021.111340
中图分类号
O1 [数学];
学科分类号
0701 ; 070101 ;
摘要
There are several recent publications criticizing the failure of COVID-19 forecasting models, with swinging over predictions and underpredictions, which have made it difficult for decision and policy making. Observing the failures of several COVID-19 forecasting models and the alarming spread of the virus, we seek to use some stable response for forecasting COVID-19, viz., ratios of COVID-19 cases to mortalities, rather than COVID-19 cases or fatalities. A trend of low COVID-19 cases-to-mortality ratios calls for urgent attention: the need for vaccines, for instance. Studies have shown that there are influences of weather parameters on COVID-19; and COVID-19 may have come to stay and could manifest a seasonal outbreak profile similar to other infectious respiratory diseases. In this paper, the influences of some weather, geographical, economic and demographic covariates were evaluated on COVID-19 response based on a series of Granger-causality tests. The effect of four weather parameters, viz., temperature, rainfall, solar irradiation and relative humidity, on daily COVID-19 cases-to-mortality ratios of 36 countries from 5 continents of the world were determined through regression analysis. Regression studies show that these four weather factors impact ratios of COVID-19 cases-to-mortality differently. The most impactful factor is temperature which is positively correlated with COVID-19 cases-to-mortality responses in 24 out of 36 countries. Temperature minimally affects COVID-19 cases-to-mortality ratios in the tropical countries. The most influential weather factor - temperature - was incorporated in training random forest and deep learning models for forecasting the cases-to-mortality rate of COVID-19 in clusters of countries in the world with similar weather conditions. Evaluation of trained forecasting models incorporating temperature features show better performance compared to a similar set of models trained without temperature features. This implies that COVID-19 forecasting models will predict more accurately if temperature features are factored in, especially for temperate countries. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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页数:15
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