Improving Wildfire Readiness Among Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Asthma: Applying a Population Health Approach to Climate Change.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.15326/jcopdf.2024.0509
Brooks T Kuhn, Reshma Gupta
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Abstract

As a result of climate change, wildfire frequency, duration, and severity are increasing in the United States. Exposure to wildfire-related air pollutants can lead to negative health outcomes, particularly among patients with preexisting respiratory diseases (e.g., asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) and those who are at higher risk for developing these conditions. Underserved communities are disproportionately affected for multiple reasons, including lack of financial and social resources, increased exposure to air pollutants at home and at work, and impaired access to health care. To best serve clinically high-risk and underserved populations, health systems must leverage community public health data, develop and mobilize a wildfire preparedness action plan to identify populations at high risk, and implement interventions to mitigate the consequences of poor air quality. University of California, Davis Health, located at the epicenter of the largest wildfires in California's history, has developed the 5 pillar Wildfire Population Health Approach: (1) identify clinically at-risk and underserved patient populations using well-validated, condition-targeted registries; (2) assemble multidisciplinary care teams to understand the needs of these communities and patients; (3) create custom analytics and wildfire-risk stratification; (4) develop care pathways based on wildfire-risk tiers by disease, risk of exposure, and health care access; and (5) identify outcome measures tailored to interventions with a commitment to continuous, iterative improvement efforts. The Wildfire Population Health Approach provides an action plan for health systems and care teams to meet the needs of clinically at-risk and underserved patients affected by the increasing health threat posed by climate change-related wildfires.

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改善慢性阻塞性肺病和哮喘患者的野火戒备状态:将人口健康方法应用于气候变化。
由于气候变化,美国的野火频率、持续时间和严重程度都在增加。暴露于与野火相关的空气污染物会导致不良的健康后果,尤其是对那些已经患有呼吸系统疾病(如哮喘和慢性阻塞性肺病)的患者以及那些罹患这些疾病的高危人群。由于缺乏经济和社会资源、在家中和工作场所暴露于空气污染物的机会增加以及获得医疗保健的途径受阻等多种原因,未得到充分服务的社区受到的影响尤为严重。为了更好地服务于临床高风险和服务不足的人群,医疗系统必须充分利用社区公共卫生数据,制定并动员野火防备行动计划以识别高风险人群,并实施干预措施以减轻空气质量差带来的后果。加利福尼亚大学戴维斯分校健康中心位于加州历史上最大野火的中心,该中心制定了五大支柱野火人口健康方法:(1)利用经过充分验证的、以病情为目标的登记册,确定临床高危和服务不足的患者人群;(2)组建多学科护理团队,了解这些社区和患者的需求;(3)创建自定义分析和野火风险分层;(4)根据疾病、暴露风险和医疗保健途径,制定基于野火风险分层的护理路径;以及(5)确定针对干预措施的结果衡量标准,并致力于持续、迭代的改进工作。野火人口健康方法为医疗系统和医疗团队提供了一个行动计划,以满足受气候变化相关野火造成的日益严重的健康威胁影响的临床高危和服务不足患者的需求。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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