4.7 Article

Emergency department visits associated with wildfire smoke events in California, 2016-2019

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
卷 238, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.117154

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Wildfire smoke; Fine particulate matter; PM2.5; Health impacts; Emergency department visits

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This study examined the impacts of wildfire smoke events on respiratory, cardiovascular, diabetes, and mental health outcomes in California. The results showed that smoke events were associated with increased risk of emergency department visits for respiratory diseases, asthma, chronic lower respiratory disease, and cardiovascular diseases. Mental health outcomes showed mixed results. The study also revealed potential disparities by race/ethnicity.
Wildfire smoke has been associated with adverse respiratory outcomes, but the impacts of wildfire on other health outcomes and sensitive subpopulations are not fully understood. We examined associations between smoke events and emergency department visits (EDVs) for respiratory, cardiovascular, diabetes, and mental health outcomes in California during the wildfire season June-December 2016-2019. Daily, zip code tabulation area-level wildfire-specific fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations were aggregated to air basins. A smoke event was defined as an air basin-day with a wildfire-specific PM2.5 concentration at or above the 98th percentile across all air basin-days (threshold = 13.5 mu g/m3). We conducted a two-stage time-series analysis using quasi-Poisson regression considering lag effects and random effects meta-analysis. We also conducted analyses stratified by race/ethnicity, age, and sex to assess potential effect modification. Smoke events were associated with an increased risk of EDVs for all respiratory diseases at lag 1 [14.4%, 95% confidence interval (CI): (6.8, 22.5)], asthma at lag 0 [57.1% (44.5, 70.8)], and chronic lower respiratory disease at lag 0 [12.7% (6.2, 19.6)]. We also found positive associations with EDVs for all cardiovascular diseases at lag 10. Mixed results were observed for mental health outcomes. Stratified results revealed potential disparities by race/ethnicity. Short-term exposure to smoke events was associated with increased respiratory and schizophrenia EDVs. Car-diovascular impacts may be delayed compared to respiratory outcomes.

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