Skip to main content

public health

Displaying 41 - 50 of 52

Health benefits and costs of filtration interventions that reduce indoor exposure to PM2.5 during wildfires

Year of Publication
2017
Publication Type

Increases in hospital admissions and deaths are associated with increases in outdoor air particles during wildfires. This analysis estimates the health benefits expected if interventions had improved particle filtration in homes in Southern California during a 10-day period of wildfire smoke exposure. Economic benefits and intervention costs are also estimated.

Local and regional smoke impacts from prescribed fires

Year of Publication
2016
Publication Type

Smoke from wildfires poses a significant threat to affected communities. Prescribed burning is conducted to reduce the extent and potential damage of wildfires, but produces its own smoke threat. Planners of prescribed fires model the likely dispersion of smoke to help manage the impacts on local communities.

Living on a flammable planet: interdisciplinary, cross-scalar and varied cultural lessons, prospects and challenges

Year of Publication
2016
Publication Type

Living with fire is a challenge for human communities because they are influenced by socio-economic, political, ecological and climatic processes at various spatial and temporal scales. Over the course of 2 days, the authors discussed how communities could live with fire challenges at local, national and transnational scales.

Wildfire smoke and public health risk

Year of Publication
2015
Publication Type

Wildfire activity is predicted to increase with global climate change, resulting in longer fire seasons and larger areas burned. The emissions from fires are highly variable owing to differences in fuel, burning conditions and other external environmental factors. The smoke that is generated can impact human populations spread over vast geographical areas.