Modeling the Impact of Climate Extremes on Seasonal Influenza Outbreaks Across Tropical and Temperate Locations

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Geohealth Pub Date : 2025-03-27 DOI:10.1029/2024GH001138
Aleksandra R. Stamper, Ayesha S. Mahmud, Jennifer R. Nuzzo, Rachel E. Baker
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Abstract

Influenza epidemics, a major contributor to global morbidity and mortality, are influenced by climate factors including absolute humidity and temperature. Climate change is expected to increase the frequency and severity of climate extremes, potentially impacting the duration and magnitude of future influenza epidemics. However, the extent of these projected effects on influenza outbreaks remains understudied. Here, we use an epidemiologic model adapted for temperate and tropical climates to explore how climate variability may affect seasonal influenza. Using climate anomalies derived from historical data, we found that simulated periods of anomalous climate conditions impacted both the projected influenza outbreak peak size and the total proportion infected, with the strongest effects observed when the anomaly was included just before the typical peak. Effects varied by climate: temperate regions showed a unimodal relationship, while tropical climates exhibited a nonlinear pattern. Our results emphasize that the intensity of weather extremes is key to understanding how climate change may affect influenza outbreaks, laying the groundwork for utilizing weather variability as a potential early warning for influenza activity.

Abstract Image

模拟极端气候对热带和温带地区季节性流感爆发的影响
流感流行是造成全球发病率和死亡率的一个主要因素,它受到包括绝对湿度和温度在内的气候因素的影响。预计气候变化将增加极端气候的频率和严重程度,可能影响未来流感流行的持续时间和规模。然而,这些预测对流感爆发的影响程度仍未得到充分研究。在这里,我们使用适用于温带和热带气候的流行病学模型来探索气候变化如何影响季节性流感。利用从历史数据中获得的气候异常,我们发现,模拟的异常气候条件时期对预测的流感爆发峰值规模和感染总比例都有影响,当在典型峰值之前包含异常时,观察到的影响最大。影响因气候而异:温带地区表现为单峰关系,而热带气候表现为非线性模式。我们的研究结果强调,极端天气的强度是了解气候变化如何影响流感爆发的关键,为利用天气变化作为流感活动的潜在早期预警奠定了基础。
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来源期刊
Geohealth
Geohealth Environmental Science-Pollution
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
124
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: GeoHealth will publish original research, reviews, policy discussions, and commentaries that cover the growing science on the interface among the Earth, atmospheric, oceans and environmental sciences, ecology, and the agricultural and health sciences. The journal will cover a wide variety of global and local issues including the impacts of climate change on human, agricultural, and ecosystem health, air and water pollution, environmental persistence of herbicides and pesticides, radiation and health, geomedicine, and the health effects of disasters. Many of these topics and others are of critical importance in the developing world and all require bringing together leading research across multiple disciplines.
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