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Health Impacts of Future Prescribed Fire Smoke: Considerations From an Exposure Scenario in California

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In response to increasing wildfire risks, California plans to expand the use of prescribed fire. We characterized the anticipated change in health impacts from exposure to smoke under a future fire-management scenario relative to a historical period (2008–2016). Using dispersion models, we estimated daily fine particulate matter (PM2.5) emissions from hypothetical future prescribed fires on 500,000-acres classified as high priority. To evaluate health impacts, we calculated excess daily cardiorespiratory emergency department visit rates attributed to all-source PM2.5, distinguishing the portion of the burden attributed to prescribed fire. The total burden was differentiated by fire type and by smoke strata-specific days to calculate strata-specific burden rates, which were then applied to estimate the burden in the future scenario. This analysis suggests that the exposure to prescribed fire smoke, measured as the number of persons exposed per year, would be 15 times greater in the future. However, these exposures were associated with lower concentrations compared to the historical period. The increased number of exposure days led to an overall increase in the future health burden. Specifically, the northern, central, and southern regions experienced the largest burden increase. This study introduces an approach that integrates spatiotemporal exposure differences, baseline morbidity, and population size to assess the impacts of prescribed fire under a future scenario. The findings highlight the need to consider both the level and frequency of exposure to guide strategies to safeguard public health as well as aid forest management agencies in making informed decisions to protect communities while mitigating wildfire risks.

Impact/Purpose

This manuscript reports the estimated change in cardiopulmonary health impacts resulting from the planned increase in the use of prescribed fire in California’s high-priority wildfire risk areas.   The estimated health impacts associated with ambient air pollution (PM2.5) exposure on days impacted by wildfire smoke or prescribed fire smoke in the past (2008-2016) was compared to health impacts associated with a projected increase in the number of prescribed fire smoke-impacted days in a hypothetical future scenario.  Among an estimated annual excess of 48,019 respiratory and cardiovascular emergency department visits attributed to PM2.5, between 2008-2016, days impacted by wildfire smoke accounted for the largest proportion of the health burden (47.9%), whereas prescribed fire smoke-impacted days accounted for the least (6.3%). In the future hypothetical scenario, model estimates of smoke particulate matter (PM2.5) emitted from prescribed fire in areas designated as high priority due to both high wildfire risk and population density indicated that more people will experience smoke exposure. Projections show that high concentrations of PM2.5 from prescribed fire will be reduced in the future, although there will be an increase in the number of days with low concentrations of exposure. Our results suggest that the health burden will increase relative to past prescribed fires due to the increase in days with low levels of smoke near populated areas.

Citation

Rosenberg, A., S. Hoshiko, J. Buckman, K. Yeomans, T. Hayashi, S. Kramer, S. Huang, N. French, AND A. Rappold. Health Impacts of Future Prescribed Fire Smoke: Considerations From an Exposure Scenario in California. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, 12(2):e2023EF003778, (2024). [DOI: 10.1029/2023EF003778]

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DOI: Health Impacts of Future Prescribed Fire Smoke: Considerations From an Exposure Scenario in California
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Last updated on April 04, 2025
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