Wildfire Health Risks in Relation to Local Senior Population’s CRD Incidence Rate in the Greater Toronto Area

Authors

  • Yuefang Huang

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54097/ijbls.v4i1.10

Keywords:

Wildfire, Public Health, PM2.5, Aging Population, Municipal Health

Abstract

Wildfires as one of the most common and frequent environmental disasters in North America, Billions of government spending, public funds, resources, and personnel have been placed to cope with this natural disaster directly. The smoke, debris, particulates, ambient ultrafine particles, and other wildfire emissions have increasingly become a public health concern to which senior populations are particularly vulnerable, due to the populations' general behaviour and their physical health conditions. This essay investigates the implications of wildfires on public health by identifying the relationship between the exposure of wildfire emissions and the incidences of chronic respiratory disease in the senior population in the Greater Toronto Area. This research estimates the effects of wildfire emission exposure by using the cross-examination of the relevant health factors, including the incidence of wildfire; particulate level, ambulance service operation log and reported respiratory emergency disease to the incidences of wildfires. The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have been placed to estimate the effect range and proximity of CRD incidences to the wildfire location.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Mamuji, A. A., & Rozdilsky, J. L. (2018). Wildfire as an increasingly common natural disaster facing Canada: Understanding the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire. Natural Hazards, 98(1), 163–180.

Matz, C. J., Egyed, M., Xi, G., Racine, J., Pavlovic, R., Rittmaster, R., Henderson, S. B., & Stieb, D. M. (2020). Health Impact Analysis of PM2.5 from wildfire smoke in Canada (2013–2015, 2017–2018). Science of The Total Environment, 725, 138506.

Holm, S. M., Miller, M. D., Balmes, J. R. (2020). Health effects of wildfire smoke in children and public health tools: A narrative review. Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 31(1), 1–20.

Mccoy, S. J., Zhao, X. (2020). Wildfire and Infant Health: A geospatial approach to estimating the Health Impacts of wildfire smoke exposure. Applied Economics Letters, 28(1), 32–37.

Weichenthal, S., Bai, L., Hatzopoulou, M., Van Ryswyk, K., Kwong, J. C., Jerrett, M., van Donkelaar, A., Martin, R. V., Burnett, R. T., Lu, H., & Chen, H. (2017). Long-term exposure to ambient ultrafine particles and respiratory disease incidence in in Toronto, Canada: A cohort study. Environmental Health, 16(1).

Tornevi, A., Andersson, C., Carvalho, A. C., Langner, J., Stenfors, N., & Forsberg, B. (2021). Respiratory health effects of wildfire smoke during summer of 2018 in the jämtland härjedalen region, Sweden. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(13), 6987.

Finkelstein, M. M., Chapman, K. R., McIvor, R. A., & Sears, M. R. (2011). Mortality among subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or asthma at two respiratory disease clinics in Ontario. Canadian Respiratory Journal, 18(6), 327–332.

Government of Ontario. (2023). Chronic disease hospitalization snapshot. Public Health Ontario. https://www. publichealthontario.ca/en/Data-and-Analysis/Chronic-Disease/ Chronic-Disease-Hospitalization.

Government of Ontario, Ministry of the Environment. (2023). Air Quality Health Index (AQHI)-Government of Ontario, Ministry of the Environment. Air Quality Health Index (AQHI). https://www.airqualityontario.com/aqhi/index.php.

National Forestry Database - Canadian Council of Forest Ministers (CCFM). (2023). Forest fires. Forest Fires | National Forestry Database. http://nfdp.ccfm. org/en/ data/ fires. php#tab311.

Downloads

Published

22-11-2023

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Huang, Y. (2023). Wildfire Health Risks in Relation to Local Senior Population’s CRD Incidence Rate in the Greater Toronto Area. International Journal of Biology and Life Sciences, 4(1), 35-36. https://doi.org/10.54097/ijbls.v4i1.10