Shifting the Conversation on Wildland Fire Smoke Exposures: More Smoke Within and Across Years Requires a New Approach to Inform Public Health Action.

Jason D Sacks, Christopher T Migliaccio, Colleen E Reid, Luke Montrose
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Abstract

With the increase in acres burned from wildfire over the last few decades, wildfire smoke is an increasing global public health threat. To date, wildfire smoke research, risk communication, and public health action has focused on short-term (or daily) smoke exposures. However, the patterns of wildfire smoke exposure are transitioning to include longer duration and repeated exposures occurring within and across years. Epidemiologic and experimental studies represent important lines of evidence that have informed risk communication and public health actions for short-term smoke exposures; however, they have yet to provide the science needed to refine public health approaches to include other dynamic exposure durations such as repeated, episodic, or cumulative. This commentary provides an overview of methodological approaches used and recent findings from epidemiologic and experimental studies that examined longer duration, repeated smoke exposures. Based on the current science, we recommend that future epidemiologic and experimental studies of wildfire smoke examine multiple exposure metrics to capture the duration, frequency, and intensity of exposures. Such studies would improve the science produced to best support the needs of the public as we strive to further protect public health in a world projected to have more smoke.

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改变关于野火烟雾暴露的谈话:年内和跨年的更多烟雾需要一种新的方法来告知公共卫生行动。
随着过去几十年野火烧毁面积的增加,野火烟雾对全球公共卫生的威胁日益严重。迄今为止,野火烟雾研究、风险沟通和公共卫生行动的重点是短期(或每日)烟雾暴露。然而,野火烟雾暴露的模式正在转变,包括更长的持续时间和在年内和跨年发生的重复暴露。流行病学和实验研究是重要的证据线索,为短期吸烟暴露的风险通报和公共卫生行动提供了信息;然而,他们还没有提供完善公共卫生方法所需的科学,以包括其他动态暴露持续时间,如重复暴露、偶发暴露或累积暴露。本评论概述了所使用的方法学方法和流行病学和实验研究的最新发现,这些研究检查了持续时间更长、重复的烟雾暴露。基于目前的科学,我们建议未来野火烟雾的流行病学和实验研究检查多种暴露指标,以捕获暴露的持续时间、频率和强度。在我们努力在一个预计将有更多烟雾的世界中进一步保护公众健康之际,此类研究将改进所产生的科学成果,以最好地支持公众的需求。
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