Covid-19 may have a temperature sweet spot at which it spreads fastest but it may not react to heat the same way other pathogens do.
Coronavirus’
(Covid-19) sensitivity to temperature has many people looking at
summers with high hopes as the outbreak continues to rage on. Recent
studies, however, are not as optimistic.
Research
by a team from south China’s Sun Yat-sen University, sought to
determine how the spread of the virus might be affected by changes in
season and temperature, according to a report in The South China
Morning Post.
“Temperature
could significantly change Covid-19
transmission,” it said. “And there might be a best temperature
for viral transmission.”
This
temperature ‘sweet spot’ -- an optimum level at which the
outbreak spreads faster – has given rise to assumptions that
seasonal changes will curb the outbreak, the newspaper reported
quoting the study.
The
“virus is highly sensitive to high temperature”, which could
prevent it from spreading in warmer countries, while the opposite
appeared to be true in colder climes, the study said.
As
a result, it suggested that “countries and regions with a lower
temperature adopt the strictest control measures”.
A
separate study by a group of researchers from Harvard’s T.H. Chan
School of Public Health, found that sustained transmission and rapid
growth in infections was possible in a range of humidity conditions –
from cold and dry provinces in China to tropical locations.
“Weather
alone, [such as an] increase of temperature and humidity as the
spring and summer months arrive in the Northern Hemisphere, will not
necessarily lead to declines in case counts without the
implementation of extensive public health interventions,” said the
study, which was published in February.
Both
the studies, however, are yet to be peer-reviewed.
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