Will warm weather really kill COVID-19?





According to a study by Chinese scientists, COVID-19 spreads rapidly in cold temperatures. Researchers at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou have compiled a list of each confirmed infection of the coronavirus that causes the disease. The database is from January 20 to February 4 and compares China's official weather data or the transition dates of the affected country's capital cities. Temperatures can significantly change the COVID-19 transmission of a study published in February. This has not yet been comprehensively reviewed, but at this time, scientists suggest that low-temperature countries and regions should adopt more rigorous study measures, as Chinese authorities have made significant progress in stopping the spread of the virus. On March 9, China's National Health Commission announced 40 new coronavirus infections, a daily increase from the end of January, but four new cases are in the city of Wuhan, where the first outbreak began. The remaining infections were found in Gansu province, but officials say the cases were imported by people traveling from Iran rather than through local broadcasts. It will be three consecutive days as China has non-imported infections outside of the Hubei province. But other countries are reporting dramatic momentum in new infections and deaths. In South Korea, cases have crossed 7,000. Northern Italy was put on lockdown as authorities reported 133 new deaths on March 8. And Saudi Arabia has shut down the area, home to half a million people, in an effort to curb the spread of the virus. This is the first such move in the Gulf region, which has so far confirmed more than 230 COVID 19 in the state. Such infections in warm weather suggest that warm temperatures do not limit virus activity. A separate study by Harvard University researchers found that humid conditions in northeastern China's cold and arid provinces could rapidly transmit humid conditions from the tropics to the southwest or south of Singapore. During the spring and summer months, only the weather has reached the Northern Hemisphere, and as temperatures and humidity increase, the number of cases does not decrease without the implementation of comprehensive public health interventions. The Harvard study also awaits peer review, with other experts saying that if the novel coronavirus is similar to many other viral pathogens, the number of cases will decrease as the weather warms up. But the head of the World Health Organization's Health Emergency Program says we should not give any relief in the early summer. We must assume that the virus continues to be capable of spreading.
Will warm weather really kill COVID-19? Will warm weather really kill COVID-19? Reviewed by Durgajit Deka Baruah on May 09, 2020 Rating: 5

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