Mortality risk attributable to wildfire-related PM 2·5 pollution: a global time series study in 749 locations
Many regions of the world are now facing more frequent and unprecedentedly large wildfires. However, the association between wildfire-related PM and mortality has not been well characterised. We aimed to comprehensively assess the association between short-term exposure to wildfire-related PM and mo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Lancet. Planetary health 2021-09, Vol.5 (9), p.e579 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many regions of the world are now facing more frequent and unprecedentedly large wildfires. However, the association between wildfire-related PM
and mortality has not been well characterised. We aimed to comprehensively assess the association between short-term exposure to wildfire-related PM
and mortality across various regions of the world.
For this time series study, data on daily counts of deaths for all causes, cardiovascular causes, and respiratory causes were collected from 749 cities in 43 countries and regions during 2000-16. Daily concentrations of wildfire-related PM
were estimated using the three-dimensional chemical transport model GEOS-Chem at a 0·25° × 0·25° resolution. The association between wildfire-related PM
exposure and mortality was examined using a quasi-Poisson time series model in each city considering both the current-day and lag effects, and the effect estimates were then pooled using a random-effects meta-analysis. Based on these pooled effect estimates, the population attributable fraction and relative risk (RR) of annual mortality due to acute wildfire-related PM
exposure was calculated.
65·6 million all-cause deaths, 15·1 million cardiovascular deaths, and 6·8 million respiratory deaths were included in our analyses. The pooled RRs of mortality associated with each 10 μg/m
increase in the 3-day moving average (lag 0-2 days) of wildfire-related PM
exposure were 1·019 (95% CI 1·016-1·022) for all-cause mortality, 1·017 (1·012-1·021) for cardiovascular mortality, and 1·019 (1·013-1·025) for respiratory mortality. Overall, 0·62% (95% CI 0·48-0·75) of all-cause deaths, 0·55% (0·43-0·67) of cardiovascular deaths, and 0·64% (0·50-0·78) of respiratory deaths were annually attributable to the acute impacts of wildfire-related PM
exposure during the study period.
Short-term exposure to wildfire-related PM
was associated with increased risk of mortality. Urgent action is needed to reduce health risks from the increasing wildfires.
Australian Research Council, Australian National Health & Medical Research Council. |
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ISSN: | 2542-5196 2542-5196 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00200-X |