Liu Jia C, Pereira Gavin, Uhl Sarah A, Bravo Mercedes A, Bell Michelle L
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, 195 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Center for Perinatal Pediatric and Environmental Epidemiology, School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Environ Res. 2015 Jan;136:120-32. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2014.10.015. Epub 2014 Nov 20.
Climate change is likely to increase the threat of wildfires, and little is known about how wildfires affect health in exposed communities. A better understanding of the impacts of the resulting air pollution has important public health implications for the present day and the future.
We performed a systematic search to identify peer-reviewed scientific studies published since 1986 regarding impacts of wildfire smoke on health in exposed communities. We reviewed and synthesized the state of science of this issue including methods to estimate exposure, and identified limitations in current research.
We identified 61 epidemiological studies linking wildfire and human health in communities. The U.S. and Australia were the most frequently studied countries (18 studies on the U.S., 15 on Australia). Geographic scales ranged from a single small city (population about 55,000) to the entire globe. Most studies focused on areas close to fire events. Exposure was most commonly assessed with stationary air pollutant monitors (35 of 61 studies). Other methods included using satellite remote sensing and measurements from air samples collected during fires. Most studies compared risk of health outcomes between 1) periods with no fire events and periods during or after fire events, or 2) regions affected by wildfire smoke and unaffected regions. Daily pollution levels during or after wildfire in most studies exceeded U.S. EPA regulations. Levels of PM10, the most frequently studied pollutant, were 1.2 to 10 times higher due to wildfire smoke compared to non-fire periods and/or locations. Respiratory disease was the most frequently studied health condition, and had the most consistent results. Over 90% of these 45 studies reported that wildfire smoke was significantly associated with risk of respiratory morbidity.
Exposure measurement is a key challenge in current literature on wildfire and human health. A limitation is the difficulty of estimating pollution specific to wildfires. New methods are needed to separate air pollution levels of wildfires from those from ambient sources, such as transportation. The majority of studies found that wildfire smoke was associated with increased risk of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. Children, the elderly and those with underlying chronic diseases appear to be susceptible. More studies on mortality and cardiovascular morbidity are needed. Further exploration with new methods could help ascertain the public health impacts of wildfires under climate change and guide mitigation policies.
气候变化可能会增加野火的威胁,而关于野火如何影响受影响社区的健康,我们知之甚少。更好地了解野火产生的空气污染的影响,对当今和未来的公共卫生具有重要意义。
我们进行了系统检索,以识别自1986年以来发表的关于野火烟雾对受影响社区健康影响的同行评审科学研究。我们回顾并综合了该问题的科学现状,包括估计暴露的方法,并确定了当前研究中的局限性。
我们识别出61项将野火与社区人类健康联系起来的流行病学研究。美国和澳大利亚是研究最为频繁的国家(关于美国的研究有18项,关于澳大利亚的有15项)。地理范围从单个小城市(人口约55,000)到整个全球。大多数研究集中在靠近火灾事件的地区。暴露最常通过固定空气污染物监测器进行评估(61项研究中的35项)。其他方法包括使用卫星遥感以及火灾期间采集的空气样本测量值。大多数研究比较了以下两种情况下健康结果的风险:1)无火灾事件期间与火灾事件期间或之后;2)受野火烟雾影响的地区与未受影响的地区。大多数研究中,野火期间或之后的每日污染水平超过了美国环境保护局的规定。作为研究最频繁的污染物,PM10的水平因野火烟雾而比非火灾时期和/或地点高出1.2至10倍。呼吸系统疾病是研究最频繁的健康状况,且结果最为一致。在这45项研究中,超过90%报告称野火烟雾与呼吸系统发病风险显著相关。
暴露测量是当前关于野火与人类健康的文献中的关键挑战。一个局限是难以估计特定于野火的污染。需要新的方法来区分野火产生的空气污染水平与来自交通等环境源的污染水平。大多数研究发现野火烟雾与呼吸系统和心血管疾病风险增加有关。儿童、老年人以及患有潜在慢性病的人似乎易受影响。需要更多关于死亡率和心血管发病率的研究。采用新方法进行进一步探索有助于确定气候变化下野火对公共卫生的影响,并指导缓解政策。