Wildfire smoke can hurt you in surprising ways

SPRING and summer in the US now come with a new normal: Days and even weeks where the acrid overhang of wildfire smoke forces us indoors. At its worst, not even shuttered windows can protect us from its effects — the stinging eyes, runny noses and burning lungs. 

As the Earth’s climate warms, wildfires tear through a larger swath of land each year. 

As my Bloomberg Opinion colleague Mark Gongloff has explained, in some parts of the US, the fire season now stretches a month longer than in 1973. 

These more intense, longer wildfire seasons are pushing this specific brand of pollution into parts of the country not accustomed to orange skies and unbreathable air. 

That’s compromising our health — not just when the smoke is thick, but for years after. Researchers are increasingly recognising that wildfire smoke can bring health problems wherever it drifts. 

Many of the near-term problems with wildfire smoke exposure are by now well understood. 

The most serious, of course, is death. A recent working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research estimated that the US would see nearly 28,000 more deaths each year by 2050 due to the climate-driven rise in wildfire smoke — that’s 76% higher than the average annual deaths between 2011 and 2020. 

More of us experience milder but still serious consequences, like worsening asthma and debilitating headaches. When smoke from Canadian wildfires wafted thousands of miles to hang over large tracts of the US last summer, it led to a 17% rise in asthma-related emergency room visits, according to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. 

More recently, less-obvious health issues have come to light. Multiple studies have found a connection between wildfire smoke and pregnancy complications, including preeclampsia (a form of dangerously high blood pressure) and premature births. 

But unravelling the long-term health effects has been trickier. For much of the year, we aren’t exposed to any wildfire smoke, and then it can suddenly surge. “How the human body handles that and what the long-term repercussions are remain very understudied and somewhat unknown,” said Joan Casey, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Washington. 

And of course, we’re also exposed to other forms of air pollution that affect our health. Separating the impact of wildfire smoke from that of other pollutants has been challenging. 

One problem is that most air-quality monitors are in cities, creating a frustrating information gap for researchers. “We have these huge, rural areas where we really don’t know what the air quality is like — and that’s where people are often most exposed to wildfires,” Casey said. 

Ideally, researchers trying to unravel the health impacts of wildfire smoke want to understand how often someone was exposed to the smallest particles, known as PM2.5, how intense the exposure was, and how many days it lasted. 

And then they’d want to follow them over time and compare to them to a similar group that has had the advantage of a smoke-free environment. 

But nothing is ever that cut and dried in the real world. For example, wildland firefighters are an obvious choice, but less obvious is who they should be compared to, said Marshall Burke, deputy director of Stanford University’s Centre on Food Security and the Environment. 

They could be compared to regular firefighters, but the two groups also might make lifestyle choices — take more risks or be more outdoorsy, for example — that could factor into their long-term health. 

Researchers can try to control for those differences, but “that’s really hard to do in a convincing way,” Burke said. Another limitation is that wildland firefighters, overwhelmingly White and male, don’t represent the US population at large. 

Nevertheless, researchers are finding creative ways to disentangle the effects of wildfire smoke from those of other pollutants. Recent work led by Casey, for example, linked geographical information to a decade of insurance data for some 1.2 million Californians over the age of 60. That allowed research- ers to estimate how much of their PM2.5 exposure came from wildfire smoke compared to other forms of pollution. They found inhaling wildfire smoke raised the risk of dementia — a risk exacerbated by someone’s poverty level. 

The best information would come from tracking people exposed to wildfire smoke over time. An ambitious project in Hawaii is studying people living near the wildfires that devastated parts of Maui in 2023. This kind of prospective study will take time to get answers, and also faces a challenge: it needs long-term, sustainable fund- ing to keep tabs on people for decades. 

While we wait for better data, the bottom line is that longer, more extreme wildfire seasons that blanket the country in smoke are bad for our health — in both the short and long run. 

“Everything we found in our work, consistent with other work on air pollution more broadly, is that there’s no safe exposure. The more you get, the worse the outcome is,” Burke said. 

So yes, we must more aggressively fight climate change. But we also have to help people mitigate the effects of smoke right now. Here, lessons from the pandemic can be reinforced. 

Wearing a high-quality mask can greatly reduce your exposure outside. But we also need to pay much more attention to air quality where we spend most of our time: Indoors. 

Investing in HEPA filtration for schools, workplaces and homes may be our best chance to give our lungs respite from the smoke. — Bloomberg 

  • This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. 

  • This article first appeared in The Malaysian Reserve weekly print edition