Wednesday, 19 July 2023

The health effects of wildfire smoke remain unknown

Plus more health news |

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What we don't know about the health effects of wildfire smoke
By Lucas Wittman
Editorial Director, TIME Ideas

For weeks now, wildfire smoke from massive fires in the boreal forests of Canada have spread over swaths of the U.S. On July 18 and 19, parts of the East Coast were once again shrouded in haze with air quality readings spiking towards unhealthy. Yearly exposure to wildfire smoke is likely to be the new normal for large parts of the U.S., Europe, and Asia going forward. 

While we know that wildfire smoke isn't healthy for older people, those suffering from many medical conditions, and young children, we don't really know how unhealthy it is, exactly. Despite the fact that humans have lived with smoke since we discovered fire, there are many unanswered questions. Augustin Guibaud, a leading expert at University College London in the field of fire and smoke dynamics, addresses what we don't know about wildfire smoke's health impacts, what kind of health risks we should be watching for, and why more research is urgently needed.

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One More Read From Elsewhere
White men's mental ability declines after retirement faster than other groups

In the years following their retirement, white men in the U.S. suffer cognitive declines much faster than other groups such as white women or Black men, according to a new study. As Alexandre Tanzi explains in Bloomberg, one reason could be that other groups have better developed social networks, which help ease their transition into life after working.

 

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Today's newsletter was written by Lucas Wittmann and Oliver Staley, and edited by Oliver.

 
 
 
 
 
 

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