Fig. 7: Summary of cumulative exposure–response curves of scarlet fever incidence for air pollutants (NO2 and O3), meteorological factors (sunlight, wind speed, relative humidity, precipitation and mean temperature) at lag 0–15 months from 2013 to 2018. | Nature Communications

Fig. 7: Summary of cumulative exposure–response curves of scarlet fever incidence for air pollutants (NO2 and O3), meteorological factors (sunlight, wind speed, relative humidity, precipitation and mean temperature) at lag 0–15 months from 2013 to 2018.

From: Exposure to air pollution and scarlet fever resurgence in China: a six-year surveillance study

Fig. 7: Summary of cumulative exposure–response curves of scarlet fever incidence for air pollutants (NO2 and O3), meteorological factors (sunlight, wind speed, relative humidity, precipitation and mean temperature) at lag 0–15 months from 2013 to 2018.

In addition to the adjusted air pollutants and meteorological conditions, the other adjusted variables in the model are temporal trend, the indicator variable of summer and winter breaks, quantile groups for average incidences, and incidence in the previous month. Source data are provided as a Source Data file.

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