Closing Schools Effective Against COVID-​19 – Hot Weather Doesn’t Help

May 8, 2020

Share Post

U of T Researchers Publish First Peer-Reviewed Global Study Showing Summer Won’t End Transmission of the Virus

By Heidi Singer

University of Toronto researchers have found the first hard evidence that hot weather doesn’t help in the fight against COVID-19 — but that closing schools does.

Peter Jüni
Peter Jüni

“If we open schools too soon or without appropriate measures to control the pandemic it could backfire big time,” says Peter Jüni, lead author of the study, and a professor of epidemiology and medicine at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation and the Department of Medicine. “Countries that closed schools quickly are faring better on average than those that didn’t – with climate playing no role.  Our research suggests warming weather should not be a factor in the decision to re-open schools.”

The authors studied 144 geopolitical areas around the world with more than 375,000 COVID-19 cases by March 27. They published their results in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) May 8 – the first peer-reviewed global study outside of China to show that climate is unlikely to play a role in transmission.

The bad news: the researchers found no evidence that countries experiencing warm weather in March had any advantage over colder climates. The good news: public health interventions, specifically restrictions of mass gatherings, school closures and other social distancing measures, proved highly effective.

“Summer is not going to make this go away,” says Prof. Dionne Gesink, another study author and Dalla Lana School of Public Health epidemiologist. “It’s important people know that. On the other hand, the more public health interventions an area had in place, the bigger the impact on slowing the epidemic growth. These public health interventions are really important because they’re the only thing working right now to slow the epidemic.”

To measure the effect of climate, the researchers studied the period right around the Spring Equinox, when sunlight reaches both hemispheres of the Earth in equal amounts.  As a result, they were able to factor in latitude along with temperature in major cities around the world and cross-reference them with public health interventions, such as school closures.

The results – that hotter weather had no effect on the pandemic’s progression – surprised the authors. “We had conducted a preliminary study which suggested that both latitude and temperature could play a role,” says Jüni, who is also Director of the Applied Health Research Centre at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital. “But when we repeated the study under much more rigorous conditions, we got the opposite result.”

They did find that high humidity might help fight the virus a little – possibly because aerosol droplets fall to the ground more quickly or virus particles become unstable in wet, heavy air. But that weak association paled in comparison to social distancing measures.

The plight of Greece and Singapore illustrate the difference public health interventions make, Jüni says. Greece shut its schools just 14 days after its first positive test and banned public gatherings. Singapore – with warmer and more humid climate than Greece – experienced its first case in January, but resisted shutting schools until April 8 and allowed public gatherings. At the height of each country’s outbreak, Singapore suffered roughly 10 times as many cases as Greece.

Because the flu largely disappears in warmer weather, many people are hoping COVID-19 will follow the same trajectory. But Jüni points out that most people are at least partially immune to the flu and that immunity builds as people get vaccinated or become infected and recover again over the years. When flu season returns in the fall, it’s because of mutations that allow a new round of infections, the end of summer holidays, and perhaps because of the colder weather. In contrast, “this virus doesn’t need favourable conditions to thrive because people have no immunity to it.”

Although families are suffering with school closures, Jüni says Canada can look to countries like Germany that follow public health guidelines to learn how schools can reopen carefully in areas with low community transmission. This approach will still use strict social distancing protocols, avoid mass gatherings in schools, and keep class sizes to a minimum. He suggests that different strategies to reopen schools should be rigorously tested in randomized trials.

Related News

Moonshot 2024: Redefining Healthcare Beyond Hospital Walls

November 12, 2024

Read More
A professional headshot of a woman with shoulder-length dark hair, smiling and wearing a blazer. The background is a deep blue with graphic elements including a medical cross and 'AI' symbol, along with colored geometric shapes in blue, green, and purple in the corners. New research explores AI transformation in healthcare.

Connaught Award-Supported Publication Explores AI Transformation in Healthcare

October 25, 2024

Faculty / Research

Read More
Three individuals stand on stage, one in the center holding an award. The recipient, wearing a traditional patterned garment, is presented the award by a man in a suit on the left, while a woman in business attire on the right looks on with a smile. The background displays a screen with a presentation. Health Administration Student Advancing Equity.

Health Administration Student Advancing Equity in Ontario Healthcare

October 18, 2024

Students

Read More
A woman with long black hair and glasses smiles while sitting outdoors on a concrete ledge by the water. She is wearing a light green short-sleeved top and black pants. Behind her, there is a calm body of water, a rocky breakwater, and a red lighthouse in the distance.

Resident excited to continue U of T training while focusing on quality improvement and patient safety

October 17, 2024

Students

Read More

Leading Digital and AI Innovations in the Master of Health Informatics Program

October 16, 2024

Education / Faculty / Students

Read More
Two people; a male and woman. The male is smiling wide dressed in a suit and tie. The woman is smiling warmly, and is wearing a dress. Both are recipients of CIHR Project Grants.

IHPME Research Teams Awarded CIHR Project Grants

October 15, 2024

Faculty / Research

Read More

Sign up for IHPME Connect.

Keep up to date with IHPME’s News & Research, Events & Program, Recognition, e-newsletter.

Subscribe to Connect Newsletter

Get in Contact


Communications

Marielle Boutin
Email Address: ihpme.communications@​utoronto.ca

Manages all IHPME-wide communications and marketing initiatives, including events and announcements.