COVID-19 incidences and its association with environmental quality: A country-level assessment in India
Arabinda Maiti, Suman Chakraborti, Suvamoy Pramanik, Srikanta, Sannigrahi

TL;DR
This study assessed the relationship between key air pollutants and COVID-19 cases in India, finding no significant association at the district level, suggesting other factors may influence COVID-19 spread.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive district-level analysis of air pollution and COVID-19 incidences in India, highlighting the lack of significant correlation unlike previous studies.
Findings
No substantial association between air pollution and COVID-19 cases.
Climate variables, except wind speed, show no significant correlation.
Air pollution levels do not predict COVID-19 incidences in Indian districts.
Abstract
This study explored the association between the five key air pollutants (Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2), Sulphur Dioxide (SO2), Particulate Matter (PM2.5, PM10), and Carbon Monoxide (CO)) and COVID-19 incidences in India. The COVID-19 confirmed cases, air pollution concentration and meteorological variables (temperature, wind speed, surface pressure) for district and city scale were obtained for 2019 and 2020. The location-based air pollution observations were converted to a raster surface using interpolation. The deaths and positive cases are reported so far were found highest in Mumbai (436 and 11394), followed by Ahmedabad (321 and 4991), Pune (129 and 2129), Kolkata (99 and 783), Indore (83 and 1699), Jaipur (53 and 1111), Ujjain (42 and 201), Surat (37 and 799), Vadodara (31 and 400), Chennai (23 and 2647), Bhopal (22 and 652), Thane (21 and 1889), respectively. Unlike the other studies,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 impact on air quality · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
