Seasonal association between viral causes of hospitalised acute lower respiratory infections and meteorological factors in China: a retrospective study
Bing Xu, Jinfeng Wang, Zhongjie Li, Chengdong Xu, Yilan Liao, Maogui, Hu, Jing Yang, Shengjie Lai, Liping Wang, Weizhong Yang

TL;DR
This study investigates how meteorological factors influence the seasonal patterns of respiratory viruses across different regions in China, revealing regional differences and interactions among weather variables affecting virus prevalence.
Contribution
It identifies key meteorological factors and their interactions that explain the seasonality of respiratory viruses in various Chinese regions, using a large hospital dataset and the geographical detector method.
Findings
RSV and influenza peak seasonally in the north and south.
Temperature, pressure, vapour pressure, and rainfall are major explanatory factors.
Interactions between meteorological factors enhance their explanatory power.
Abstract
Acute lower respiratory infections caused by respiratory viruses are common and persistent infectious diseases worldwide and in China, which have pronounced seasonal patterns. Meteorological factors have important roles in the seasonality of some major viruses. Our aim was to identify the dominant meteorological factors and to model their effects on common respiratory viruses in different regions of China. We analysed monthly virus data on patients from 81 sentinel hospitals in 22 provinces in mainland China from 2009 to 2013. The geographical detector method was used to quantify the explanatory power of each meteorological factor, individually and interacting in pairs. 28369 hospitalised patients with ALRI were tested, 10387 were positive for at least one virus, including RSV, influenza virus, PIV, ADV, hBoV, hCoV and hMPV. RSV and influenza virus had annual peaks in the north and…
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