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2025
The association between weekly mean temperature and the epidemic of influenza across 122 countries/regions, 2014–2019
The Journal of Biomedical Research
2025
Understanding influenza-like illness dynamics in Jiangsu, China: impacts of COVID-19 control measures and meteorological factors on the population health during 2018–2023
BMJ Public Health
2024
The role of meteorological factors on influenza incidence among children in Guangzhou China, 2019–2022
Frontiers in Public Health
2024
Association between ambient temperature and influenza prevalence: A nationwide time-series analysis in 201 Chinese cities from 2013 to 2018
Environment International
2024
COVID-19 and the impact of climatic parameters: a case study of Bangladesh
Theoretical and Applied Climatology
2023
Effects of short-term PM2.5 exposure on blood lipids among 197,957 people in eastern China
Scientific Reports
2023
Effects of ambient temperature on influenza-like illness: A multicity analysis in Shandong Province, China, 2014–2017
Frontiers in Public Health
2023
The role of vaccination and environmental factors on outbreaks of high pathogenicity avian influenza H5N1 in Bangladesh
One Health
2023
Spatial distribution and driving factors of the associations between temperature and influenza-like illness in the United States: a time-stratified case-crossover study
BMC Public Health
2023
Spatiotemporal effects of meteorological conditions on global influenza peaks
Environmental Research
2022
Effect of absolute humidity on influenza activity across different climate regions in China
Environmental Science and Pollution Research
2021
Effect of meteorological factors on the activity of influenza in Chongqing, China, 2012–2019
PLOS ONE
2020
Global Research Output and Theme Trends on Climate Change and Infectious Diseases: A Restrospective Bibliometric and Co-Word Biclustering Investigation of Papers Indexed in PubMed (1999–2018)
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
2020
Forecasting seasonal influenza-like illness in South Korea after 2 and 30 weeks using Google Trends and influenza data from Argentina
PLOS ONE
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