Long-term impact of PM2.5 on mortality is exacerbated when wildfire events occur
Long-term impact of PM2.5 on mortality is exacerbated when wildfire events occur
There is extensive evidence that long-term exposure to all-source PM2.5 increases mortality. However, to date, no study has evaluated whether this effect is exacerbated in the presence of wildfire events. Here, we study 60+ million older US adults and find that wildfire events increase the harmful effects of long-term all-source PM2.5 exposure on mortality, providing a new and realistic conceptualization of wildfire health risks.
Federica Spoto、Francesca Dominici、Danielle Braun、Joan A. Casey
环境污染、环境污染防治灾害、灾害防治
Federica Spoto,Francesca Dominici,Danielle Braun,Joan A. Casey.Long-term impact of PM2.5 on mortality is exacerbated when wildfire events occur[EB/OL].(2025-05-22)[2025-06-08].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.16613.点此复制
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