Full Length Research Paper
ABSTRACT
The potential reasons why COVID-19 is not spreading rapidly in Sub-Saharan Africa include sociopolitical, biological and environmental variables. Among the latter, some studies indicate temperature and atmospheric pressure as significantly influential. Could they have impact on the number of COVID-19 cases in Mozambique? The aim of this study is to analyze the relationships between weather and the frequency of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Mozambique, Southern Africa. The study was conducted in Mozambique, Maputo area (Province and City) and Nampula Province. Daily history of weather variables – daily maximum and minimum temperatures and atmospheric pressure – was obtained from three online databases (AccuWeather, Time and Date AS and WeatherSpark) and the number of COVID-19 cases from official Government’s daily Bulletins. The main statistical analyses were Pearson correlations between the variables. The first case was observed in the Maputo area on 22 March, 2020 and the cases in Mozambique increased exponentially up to 769 by 24 June, 2020. The first three cases in Nampula province were observed on 24 May 2020 but its frequency surpassed Maputo area’s within one month. Temperatures showed negative correlations with the number of cases in all areas and pressure showed positive correlations in Maputo area and Nampula Province. A bubble chart allowed the visualization of the combined relationship of both weather variables and the number of cases, suggesting that the number of cases increases as temperature decreases and pressure increases. Temperature and atmospheric pressure seems to be correlated with the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Mozambique. Thus, decision-makers should consider weather as a predictor of the rate at which the pandemic is spreading in the country.
Key words: COVID-19, Mozambique, Maputo, Nampula, weather, temperature, atmospheric pressure.
Abbreviation: COVID-19, Coronavirus disease of 2019; INS, Instituto Nacional de Saúde (National Institute of Health); MADIS, Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System; NASA, National Aeronautics and Space Administration; SARS-CoV-2, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2; SPSS, Statistical Product and Service Solutions; USA, United State of America; WHO, World Health Organization; WMO, World Meteorological Organization.
INTRODUCTION
Mozambique was among the last countries in the world with confirmed cases of COVID-19, on 22 March 2020 (World Health Organization 2020d, c). President Jacinto Nyusi (2020b) declared an Emergency State for the entire Mozambican territory through the Decree 11/2020, considering COVID-19 as public calamity. By then, there were already half a million people infected worldwide, with 30,000 dead (Nyusi, 2020b). Just before Mozambique presented the first confirmed cases of COVID-19, all countries around already had cases (Nyusi, 2020a). The Government was engaged in COVID-19 surveillance and control, following guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO) (Nyusi, 2020a). There were 788 cases by the end of June, still increasing (SAVANA, 2020). Most cases have been mild (Nyusi, 2020a; SAVANA, 2020).
There are several social, biological and environmental factors affecting the dissemination of COVID-19 in Africa (Cambaza, 2020; Nachega et al., 2020; Njenga et al., 2020) and worldwide. There have been several unexpected events, at least considering their magnitude, such as the disproportionally high frequency of cases in the northern hemisphere in relation to the south (World Health Organization, 2020a), or simply the fact that Africa did not face the calamity as severely as the developed world, even with its vulnerable healthcare systems (Houssin et al., 2020) or precarious hygiene or sanitation (Gates, 2020). There is plenty of focus on what scientists, legislators and decision-makers have to do to minimize COVID-19 dissemination but the role of environmental variables such as temperature or atmospheric pressure should not be underestimated. For instance, low temperature and high humidity have been associated to high frequency of confirmed cases in China, particularly Wuhan City (Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020b).
Despite the remarkable effort of the National Institute of Health (Instituto Nacional da Saúde, 2020b), press and mainstream media to inform the population, there is plenty of misinformation and panic, and also lack of attention to potentially reliable tools and data which could at least support key decision-makers. In their brief report, Battineni et al. (2020) asked an important question: how is weather related to COVID-19? In theory and according to observations, weather should affect COVID-19 dissemination (Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020a), as it at least affects the epidemiology of other hygiene-related diseases (Cambaza et al., 2019, 2020; Mongo et al., 2020). Thus, this paper aims to analyze how two meteorological variables – temperature and atmospheric pressure – have been influencing the dynamics of COVID-19 dissemination in Mozambique. If there are correlations between weather variables and the frequency of confirmed cases, it is possible to develop weather-based models to forecast the number of cases.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study area
Mozambique (Figure 1) is a southeastern African country surrounded by Tanzania and Malawi (north), Zambia (northwest), Zimbabwe (east), South Africa and Swaziland (southwest) and Indian Ocean (east). The area is 801,590 km2 and the population is 27,909,798 (2017 census), with a density of 28.7/km2. The total GDP is US $41.473 billion (US$1,331 per capita), with most people living below the poverty line (US $1.90 per day (The World Bank Group, 2020)). Furthermore, the healthcare system hardly covers the entire country, with approximately 7.7 doctors and 27 nurses per 100 inhabitants (Ministério da Saúde, 2016). There are serious hygiene issues in urban and suburban settings, for instance, in markets (Cambaza et al., 2018), and in the environment infectious diseases such as malaria and cholera are endemic (Cambaza et al., 2020; Ferrão et al., 2016).
The current manuscript is focused on the entire country, Maputo area (in this manuscript described as the combination of Maputo City and Maputo Province, south) and Nampula Province (in the northern area); both locations are among the ones with the largest numbers of confirmed cases by the end of June 2020 (Ministério da Saúde, 2020b). Maputo City is the country’s economic and political capital and Maputo Province includes Matola City, the country’s largest industrial park. Thus, Maputo area is the country’s busiest area; it is multicultural, frequently receiving people from all over Mozambique. Furthermore, the so-called Maputo Development Corridor is a strategic route for cargo and people from the Indian Ocean to northeastern South African provinces (Dzumbira et al., 2017; Rogerson, 2001). The corridor has been a potential source of exposure to COVID-19 since South Africa recorded the highest number of confirmed cases in the entire continent (124,590 by 27 June 2020). Nampula Province might be highly vulnerable to rapid dissemination of COVID-19 because it is the country’s most populated (6,102,867 inhabitants) and densely populated area (74.8 inhabitants per km²) (Instituto Nacional de Estatística, 2017); it has some social practices such as polygamy (Arora, 2016), and there is also Nacala Corridor, the first point of entry of cargo and people from Asian countries to Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia, among other countries (Jesus Rock and Wu, 2020; Zaehringer et al., 2018). Also, Nampula City is the capital of northern Mozambique and many tourists visit Nampula Province due to Mozambique Island, a world heritage (Dantas e Sá and Mather, 2011).
Data collection
The main variables for the current analysis were maximum and minimum daily temperatures, number of COVID-19 confirmed and new cases (Mozambique, Maputo area and Nampula Province), and atmospheric pressure (Maputo area and Nampula Province). This study used data from the following sources:
(i) Temperature data of Mozambique, in general, were obtained from AccuWeather (2020)database. AccuWeather’s source is the US National Weather Service (2020);
(ii) Time and Date AS (2020), and online database with weather history (maximum and minimum daily temperature and pressure) of Maputo area and Nampula Province. Its data can be traced to stations run by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS), a database of the US National Weather Service (2020);
(iii) Cedar Lake Ventures Inc. (2020)(WeatherSpark) to estimate values of missing data in Time and Date AS database. Data from Weather Spark do not comprise observations. Instead, they are estimated based on historical records provided by MERRA-2 satellite of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) after some accuracy correction according to the International Standard Atmosphere (International Organization for Standardization, 1975);
(iv) The website “Fica Atento” from Instituto Nacional da Saúde (2020a)(INS), Mozambique, with daily updates about number of COVID-19 new and confirmed cases.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed on Microsoft Excel 2016™ (Microsoft Corporation, Washington DC, US), JASP (version 0.10.2, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) (Team, 2019)and SPSS Statistics (International Business Machines, Armonk, New York, USA). Trends of daily temperature and atmospheric pressure through time plotted and analyzed through regression and curve fitting, on Excel. The same software was used to plot the number of confirmed cases in Mozambique, Maputo area and Nampula Province since 22 March until 24 June 2020. Then, the data were transferred to JASP and used to determine correlations between maximum and minimum daily temperature and number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Mozambique. The same analysis was performed for Maputo area and Nampula Province including atmospheric pressure. Finally, on SPSS, a bubble plot allowed the combined analysis of the combined relationship between weather variables – minimum temperature and pressure – and the frequency of confirmed cases.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Weather variation
Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests show significant variations in maximum and minimum daily temperatures (p < 0.001) for both, from 22 March to 24 June 2020. Despite fluctuations, it is possible to notice that both temperatures have been decreasing (), although only the minimum daily temperature presented considerable consistency with a simple algebraic trend (R2 ≈ 0.65). It is well-known that temperature in Mozambique consistently decreases from mid-April to mid-July, and this period, meteorologically described as the dry season, is widely perceived as the winter due to the temperature drop. Previous research from China showed that temperature is inversely proportional to incidence of COVID-19 (Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020a). This is relevant because some authorities believe that respiratory diseases such as influenza are more incident during winter because people tend to stay indoors during this season, thus more easily infecting each other (Lowen and Steel, 2014). If this is the case, rather than a direct effect of the temperature on the viral particles, the temperature might not be important. The perceived winter is leading people to stay indoors, favoring proliferation of COVID-19, even if the season is not as cold winter from temperate or subpolar areas.
In Maputo area, the maximum and minimum daily temperatures showed similar trend with the entire country, and it is possible to notice that logarithmic regression shows more consistency, as R2 values indicate (a). Maputo is the country’s most southern area, the furthest from the equator, and among the few below the Tropic of Capricorn, thus its temperature decline was understandably below the country’s average. By the logic of the aforementioned Chinese researchers (Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020a), Maputo is among the most vulnerable areas for the dissemination of COVID-19. Indeed, Maputo area was the first with confirmed cases (Tiago, 2020a) and it has been consistent among the locations with the highest frequency of cases, presenting by 3 July 2020 the third highest number of cases (Ministério da Saúde, 2020b). Yet, several other reasons are likely affecting the incidence of COVID-19 in Maputo area, as it includes Maputo City, the capital and Mozambique’s most densely populated area, and Matola City, the country’s largest industrial park. For instance, Maputo shares its border with South Africa, the location with the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Sub-Saharan Africa by the end of June 2020 (World Health Organization, 2020e).In addition, Maputo City has an international airport and port, being perhaps the major point of entry for people coming from abroad. Domestically, there is frequent migration between Maputo City and the rest of the country.
Nampula also showed decline in maximum and minimum daily temperatures (b), even though the current analysis included less data for this area, starting approximately two months when compared to the country and Maputo. The trends of temperature decline are also consistent with logarithmic functions, and the idea of increased risk of COVID-19 dissemination applies in Nampula Province. Furthermore, Nampula area also has other factors potentially affecting the dynamics of COVID-19 transmission among people, as the area hosts the country’s third capital (also called Nampula), has an international airport and port, among other factors. Its privileged position in northern Mozambique makes its port, in Nacala City, the first location where ships from Asia arrive, and countries without sea, such as Malawi and Zambia, rely considerably on. Thus, there is considerable movement of people and goods in Nampula Province. Yet, Nampula is very far from South Africa, not having the same risk of immigration of infected people as Maputo area; it is not as busy as the country’s capital and the first case of COVID-19 was observed two months after the first case in Maputo. Furthermore, its position in northern Mozambique, closer to the equator, makes the province warmer than Maputo, and this idea is consistent with the observations in analyzing the period from 24 May to 24 June 2020.
In Maputo, the trend might be trigonometric or another more complex, but perhaps the inconsistency is related to the fact that the pressure was measured during the transition from the rainy season to the dry season (since mid-April) (Uele et al., 2017), while in Nampula all the measurements correspond to the dry season. Indeed, pressure in Maputo is also measured from 24 May to 24 June 2020, R² ≈ 0.7. According to Gay Lussac’s law, pressure and temperature have an inverse relationship. In other words, increase in one will cause the other to decrease. As the coolest season arises, cold air, with less energy and mobility tend to become more concentrated and exert higher pressure on the earth’s surface. In this case, there is less air and water moving up and less precipitation. On the other end, the temperature regarded as low in the dry season might be per se a reason for increased COVID-19 incidence in Mozambique.
Number of cases and correlation with weather
The data show how the number of confirmed cases has been increasing in Mozambique (a). The trend is exponential, as the number of new cases also seems to be higher over time, and the pattern seems similar to the initial stages in China (until 12 February 2020) and globally (until 23 March 2020) (World Health Organization, 2020e). Interestingly, the first case of COVID-19 in Mozambique (on 22 January 2020) appeared exactly in a period when cases were starting to slow down globally, especially in Europe, as WHO COVID-19 Situation Report 159 shows (World Health Organization 2020e). According to this document, the cases in Mozambique and other African areas appear to be part of a third “wave” after the Chinese and the European. The new wave, the largest so far, includes America, Eastern Mediterranean area, South-East Asia and Africa.
Data from the National Institute of Health show that COVID-19 is not only becoming more prevalent but also widespread throughout Mozambique (Jani, 2020). This suggests similarities between the dynamics of COVID-19 dissemination in Mozambique and elsewhere, likely due to same reasons, although the disease is spreading considerably slowly in Mozambique (Chongo et al., 2020). For instance, COVID-19 is a new disease, still under research and, although there is virtually countrywide awareness, there is misinformation due to infodemic and sensationalist journalism. This makes it difficult for the Government to properly respond and ensure people’s safety during the pandemic.
Maputo area was the first reporting confirmed cases of COVID-19, on 22 March 2020, and remained as the only affected area for two weeks until Cabo Delgado Province. Mozambique took almost four months since the Chinese government reported the outbreak of COVID-19 to WHO and, by then, the organization already had several guidelines for COVID-19 management, including the Strategic Preparedness and Response Plan (Boakye-Agyemang and Oka, 2020; Gilbert et al., 2020; Makoni, 2020). This helps in part in explaining why the pandemic is spreading slowly throughout the area (Cambaza, 2020). The cases were initially imported by Government officials and businesspeople from places such as London, Dubai and Lisbon (SAVANA, 2020), then from South Africa, as several foreign workers were repatriated as part of the latter’s emergency plan to control COVID-19 (Sociedade Notícias, 2020).
Nampula Province was among the last areas presenting confirmed cases of COVID-19, with the first three recorded on 24 May 2020 (Ministério da Saúde, 2020c). However, in less than a month, on 16 June 2020, it became the province with the highest number of cases, after sudden “leaps” on 2, 4 and 6 June and a few other events (b). A Wilcoxon rank test shows significant difference between the number of new cases in Maputo area and Nampula Province shows significant differences (p = 0.035) considering how the pandemic spread in the initial 1 month. The trend in Nampula was logarithmic (y = 53ln(d)+ 64.9; d = number of days; R² = 0,91) since 6 June 2020 suggested a lower COVID-19 reproduction rate (R0) than 3.28, as calculated by Liu et al. (2020), or even 1.4–2.5 estimated by WHO, typica in areas such as China or Europe (World Health Organization, 2020e). Mozambique and Maputo area also presented a seemingly exponential trend. Some superspreader event quickly disseminated the disease but it was later isolated or controlled (Tiago, 2020b; Governo de Moçambique, 2020), as it would explain an early inflexion from the initially exponential dissemination of the disease expected to a phase of a declining reproduction rate (Fujie and Odagaki, 2007; James et al., 2007). For instance, Cabo Delgado, a province sharing Nampula’s northern border () was the first province in Mozambique showing evidence of community transmission (Ministério da Saúde, 2020c). Perhaps SARS-CoV-2 positive people migrated from Cabo Delgado to Nampula, and the fact that the “leaps” occurred within a week is consistent with the idea that the Ministry of Health has acted promptly according to WHO guidelines (Allegranzi et al., 2020; World Health Organization, 2020f, 2020g), isolating or controlling the super spreader.
Besides likely immigrations of SARS-CoV-2 positive individuals from Cabo Delgado, it is worth considering aforementioned factors potentially facilitating the propagation of the pandemic in Nampula Province, such as the large and dense population in comparison with other areas, polygamy and other population clustering social practices, Nacala Corridor and tourism (Instituto Nacional de Estatística, 2017; Arora, 2016; Jesus Rock and Wu, 2020; Zaehringer et al., 2018; Dantas e Sá and Mather, 2011).
Pearson’s correlations (r) suggest significant impact of temperature on the number of confirmed cases (), especially the minimum daily temperature. As expected from previous observations (Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020a), the number of cases seems to be inversely proportional to temperature. There are two indicators that low temperatures are associated to increased cases of COVID-19: the inverse proportionality between temperature and number of cases and the fact that the minimum daily temperature presented a higher correlation with the number of confirmed cases.
Previous research by Guo et al. (2019)in Guangzhou, China showed that mean temperature and atmospheric pressure were associated with influenza cases. According to these authors, temperature is inversely proportional to influenza cases, while the risk of influenza increases with the increase of atmospheric pressure. Since COVID-19 is a respiratory disease frequently associated to low temperatures (Wang et al., 2020a), it perhaps shares some features with other respiratory influenza and other respiratory diseases. Other studies, also in China, showed that local weather conditions with low temperature, mild diurnal temperature range and low humidity likely favor the transmission of COVID-19 (Liu et al., 2020; Ma et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020b). Following the same logic, a study conducted in Japan found that COVID-19 prevalence decreased significantly as air temperature, air pressure, and UV index increased (Bashir et al., 2020). Thus, it seems reasonable to postulate that the dynamics of temperature-pressure can predict the number of COVID-19 confirmed cases in Mozambique, other Subsaharan African countries or areas with similar settings or level of influence of weather on the sociopolitical dynamics.
CONCLUSIONS
This study aims to analyze how weather is related to COVID-19 dissemination in Mozambique. Early observations associated low temperatures to an increased number of COVID-19 confirmed cases. Data from Mozambique appear to support such observations. Maputo area and Nampula Province presented significant negative correlations between both variables. Being these two distinct areas in several ways, plus previous knowledge of the phenomenon elsewhere, it seems reasonable to admit that temperature is inversely proportional to the frequency of COVID-19 cases. Atmospheric pressure also showed a correlation with temperatures, but in a counterintuitive fashion. Pressure increased with the number of confirmed cases, suggesting that rainfall was a minor cause of COVID-19 dissemination. Instead, fog might be playing a significant role by surfaces humid enough for SARS-CoV-2 transmission. Moreover, there seems to be some combined influence of temperature and atmospheric pressure on the number of confirmed cases. Thus, it is possible to build predictive models for confirmed cases based on temperature and pressure.
It is important to bear in mind that this study does not reveal any causality between weather variables and COVID-19 propagation. Weather’s impact on the dissemination of COVID-19 shall be regarded as potential rather than actual because the transmission route and pattern of propagation are not yet thoroughly understood among the scientific community. Thus, even if the weather is affecting the pandemic, it is important to consider it as a potential predictor rather than its driving force. Further studies could more deeply explore the dynamics of causality between the variables. Decision-makers in Mozambique can use the weather as a set of variables to pay attention among numerous others such as social and biological.
CONFLICT OF INTERESTS
The authors have not declared any conflict of interests.
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