A growing climate threat is putting Californians’ health at risk

By Todd Woody | Bloomberg

Californians exposed to both extreme heat and wildfire smoke on the same day run a greater risk of hospitalization for cardiorespiratory illness than from either threat alone, according to a new study.

High temperatures can trigger heart attacks and strokes, while particulate matter in wildfire smoke is linked to cancer and lung disease. Low-income communities of color are particularly vulnerable to this double-barreled threat driven by climate change, according to the paper published Friday in the journal Science Advances.

“We need to start thinking about developing strategies that consider these two hazards at the same time,” said Tarik Benmarhnia, a co-author of the paper and an associate professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California at San Diego. “We need to deal with extra heat and also smoke exposure because this is going to become more and more frequent in the context of climate change.”

Scientists at UC San Diego and the University of California at Los Angeles analyzed satellite and monitoring data for 995 zip codes that account for 66.8% of the state’s population. They tabulated the number of days between 2006 and 2019 when those areas experienced either excessive heat, wildfire smoke or both.

The researchers then correlated those incidents with state data on hospitalizations for cardiorespiratory conditions in those communities. They used an epidemiological statistical technique called “relative excess risk due to interaction” to estimate the health consequences of heat waves and wildfire smoke.

“Hospitalizations on days with concurrent extreme heat and wildfire smoke events exceeded the combined hospitalizations from days with either hazard,” the paper stated.

The data showed that zip codes with higher exposure risks tended to be concentrated in the northern mountains and the Central Valley, which is ringed by forested ranges that have burned repeatedly in recent years. Overall, though, the impact of extreme heat and wildfire smoke varied across the state, reflecting California’s diverse geography of mountains, valleys and coastal plains as well as a vast wealth gap.

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