The dramatic impact of coronavirus outbreak on air quality: Has it saved as much as it has killed so far?

IF 3.1 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
R. Isaifan
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引用次数: 176

Abstract

The outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was first reported from Wuhan, China, on December 31st, 2019. As the number of coronavirus infections has exceeded 100,000 with toll deaths of about 5000 worldwide as of early March, 2020, scientists and researchers are racing to investigate the nature of this virus and evaluate the short and long term effects of this disease. Despite its negative impacts that obliged the World Health Organization to declare COVID-19 epidemic as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, the rate of mortality of this infection has not exceeded 3.4% globally. On the other hand, the mortality rate caused by ambient air pollution has contributed to 7.6% of all deaths in 2016 worldwide. The outbreak of COVID-19 has forced China to lockdown its industrial activities and hence dropped its NO2 and carbon emissions by 30 and 25%, respectively. This work reports on the first case study that compares the air quality status before and after the crisis. It sheds light on the facts related to the demographics of deaths by gender, age and health status before infection. The historical data on air quality, estimates of annual deaths and its economic burden have been presented and analyzed. The actual daily deaths due to COVID-19 have been obtained from the official records of the daily Situation Reports published by World Health Organization as of March 11th. The rate of mortality due to COVID-19 was impacted by two factors: age and health status. Results show that 75% of deaths were related to cases that had underlying present diseases with the majority aged of 80+ years. The reported figures were compared with the average daily mortality due to poor air quality which reached up to 3287 deaths due to high levels of NO2, O3 and PM. The air quality status before the crisis was compared with the current situation showing that COVID-19 forced-industrial and anthropogenic activities lockdown may have saved more lives by preventing ambient air pollution than by preventing infection.
冠状病毒爆发对空气质量的巨大影响:到目前为止,它挽救的空气质量和造成的空气质量一样多吗?
2019年12月31日,中国武汉首次报告了冠状病毒病(COVID-19)暴发。截至2020年3月初,全球冠状病毒感染人数已超过10万,死亡人数约为5000人,科学家和研究人员正在竞相调查这种病毒的性质,并评估这种疾病的短期和长期影响。尽管其负面影响迫使世界卫生组织宣布COVID-19流行病为国际关注的突发公共卫生事件,但这种感染的全球死亡率并未超过3.4%。另一方面,2016年,环境空气污染造成的死亡率占全球总死亡人数的7.6%。新冠肺炎疫情迫使中国封锁了工业活动,二氧化氮和碳排放量分别下降了30%和25%。这项工作报告了第一个案例研究,比较了危机前后的空气质量状况。它阐明了按性别、年龄和感染前健康状况分列的与死亡人口统计相关的事实。介绍并分析了有关空气质量的历史数据、每年死亡人数估计数及其经济负担。截至3月11日,世界卫生组织每日发布的《形势报告》官方记录显示的新冠肺炎每日实际死亡人数。COVID-19死亡率受年龄和健康状况两个因素的影响。结果显示,75%的死亡与有潜在疾病的病例有关,大多数年龄在80岁以上。报告的数字与空气质量差造成的平均每日死亡率进行了比较,由于高浓度的二氧化氮、臭氧和PM,死亡人数高达3287人。危机前的空气质量状况与目前的情况进行了比较,结果表明,新冠肺炎迫使工业和人为活动封锁可能通过防止环境空气污染而不是预防感染来挽救更多的生命。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
11
审稿时长
8 weeks
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