Wildfire smoke linked to rise in ER visits for asthma: study

7 months ago 6
ARTICLE AD BOX

By Nicole Ireland The Canadian Press

Posted May 5, 2025 7:25 am

Updated May 5, 2025 7:26 am

1 min read

 Health risks associated with increased wildfires'

4:17 Ask the Expert: Health risks associated with increased wildfires

RELATED: Health risks associated with increased wildfires – Aug 19, 2024

A new study says visits to emergency departments for asthma spiked during a first wave of unprecedented wildfire smoke in 2023, but patient numbers returned to normal during a second wave weeks later.

The researchers say the first wave may have served as a wake-up call so people learned to protect themselves from poor air quality before the wildfire smoke struck again.

Lead author Hong Chen says patients may have received preventive medications that helped keep their asthma under control and prepared themselves for the second wave by staying indoors and using air cleaners.

 'Waskesiu visitors coping with wildfire smoke'

1:35 Waskesiu visitors coping with wildfire smoke

Trending Now

The researchers analyzed emergency department visits in Ontario in June 2023 because that was the worst wildfire season the province had ever experienced.

Story continues below advertisement

The study, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal on Monday, comes as wildfire season has already begun in British Columbia.

In an accompanying commentary, Sarah Henderson of the BC Centre for Disease Control says wildfire smoke is the new normal and Canada needs indoor air quality standards to protect people.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

Read Entire Article