Covid-19 and vit-d: Disease mortality negatively correlates with sunlight exposure.

Henry Warembourg School of Medicine, Lille University, 59000, Lille, France. Electronic address: edouard.lansiaux.etu@univ-lille.fr. NexGen Analytics, Sheridan, WY, 82801, U.S.A.. Electronic address: philippe.pebay@ng-analytics.com. Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers, 75141, Paris, France. Electronic address: jl@pi.cards. Assemblée Nationale, 75355, Paris, France. Electronic address: joachim.son-forget@assemblee-nationale.fr.

Spatial and spatio-temporal epidemiology. 2020;:100362

Abstract

The novel COVID-19 disease is a contagious acute respiratory infectious disease whose causative agent has been demonstrated to be a new virus of the coronavirus family, SARS-CoV-2. Alike with other coronaviruses, some studies show a COVID-19 neurotropism, inducing de-myelination lesions as encountered in Guillain-Barré syndrome. In particular, an Italian report concluded that there is a significant vitamin D deficiency in COVID-19 infected patients. In the current study, we applied a Pearson correlation test to public health as well as weather data, in order to assess the linear relationship between COVID-19 mortality rate and the sunlight exposure. For instance in continental metropolitan France, average annual sunlight hours are significantly (for a p-value of 1.532 × 10-32) correlated to the COVID-19 mortality rate, with a Pearson coefficient of -0.636. This correlation hints at a protective effect of sunlight exposure against COVID-19 mortality. This paper is proposed to foster academic discussion and its hypotheses and conclusions need to be confirmed by further research.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Observational Study

Metadata