4.2 Article

Lower Incidence of COVID-19 at High Altitude: Facts and Confounders

Journal

HIGH ALTITUDE MEDICINE & BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 217-222

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ham.2020.0114

Keywords

COVID-19; high altitude; hypoxia; public health; SARS-CoV-2; UV rays

Funding

  1. University of Calgary Dean's International Doctoral Recruitment Scholarship

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Pun, Matiram, Rachel Turner, Giacomo Strapazzon, Hermann Brugger, and Erik R. Swenson. Lower incidence of COVID-19 at high altitude: Facts and confounders.High Alt Med Biol00:000-000, 2020.-The rapid transmission, increased morbidity, and mortality of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has exhausted many health care systems and the global economy. Large variations in COVID-19 prevalence and incidence have been reported across and within many countries worldwide; however, this remains poorly understood. The variability and susceptibility across the world have been mainly attributed to differing socioeconomic status, burden of chronic diseases, access to health care, strength of health care systems, and early or late adoption of control measures. Environmental factors such as pollution, ambient temperature, humidity, and seasonal weather patterns at different latitudes may influence how severe the pandemic is and the incidence of infection in any part of the world. In addition, recent epidemiological data have been used to propose that altitude of residence may not only influence those environmental features considered key to lesser viral transmission, but also susceptibility to more severe forms of COVID-19 through hypoxic-hypobaria driven genomic or nongenomic adaptations specific to high-altitude populations. In this review, we critically examine these factors and attempt to determine based upon available scientific and epidemiological data whether living in high-altitude regions might be protective against COVID-19 as recent publications have claimed.

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