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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Feb 19, 2024
Date Accepted: Oct 13, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Elevated Ambient Temperature Associated With Reduced Infectious Disease Test Positivity Rates: Retrospective Observational Analysis of Statewide COVID-19 Testing and Weather Across California Counties

Kwok NWP, Pevnick J, Feldman K

Elevated Ambient Temperature Associated With Reduced Infectious Disease Test Positivity Rates: Retrospective Observational Analysis of Statewide COVID-19 Testing and Weather Across California Counties

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e57495

DOI: 10.2196/57495

PMID: 39665781

PMCID: 11656991

Elevated Ambient Temperature Associated with Reduced Infectious Disease Test Positivity Rates: A Retrospective Observational Analysis of Statewide COVID-19 Testing and Weather across California Counties

  • Nicholas Wing-Ping Kwok; 
  • Joshua Pevnick; 
  • Keith Feldman

ABSTRACT

Background:

From medication usage to time-of-day, many factors can alter body temperature (BT), even in the absence of underlying pathology. In select cases, medical guidance suggests consideration of clinical and demographic factors when interpreting BT. Environmental factors such as ambient temperature are also known to alter BT. However, the effects are small. It remains unclear if such data impacts real-world healthcare practices.

Objective:

Because fever was a primary symptom that triggered diagnostic testing for COVID-19, this manuscript leverages statewide test results from the COVID-19 pandemic to assess whether higher ambient temperatures are associated with lower test positivity rates, as environmentally-mediated BT increases would not reflect pathology.

Methods:

Aggregating California testing and climate data, a mixed-effects Beta-regression model estimated daily positivity rates as a function of ambient temperature, population, testing day of the week, and COVID prevalence across 58 counties during the 133 days between widespread testing availability and vaccine approval.

Results:

Results highlighted a significant negative association with ambient temperature which was not present in a sensitivity analysis using random daily temperatures.

Conclusions:

This work illustrates the impact of environmental factors on an essential public health activity and calls for an assessment of whether environmental context can be used to improve interpretation of patient data.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Kwok NWP, Pevnick J, Feldman K

Elevated Ambient Temperature Associated With Reduced Infectious Disease Test Positivity Rates: Retrospective Observational Analysis of Statewide COVID-19 Testing and Weather Across California Counties

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e57495

DOI: 10.2196/57495

PMID: 39665781

PMCID: 11656991

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