Koopmans Erica, Cornish Katie, Fyfe Trina M, Bailey Katherine, Pelletier Chelsea A
Health Research Institute, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, BC, V2N 4Z9, Canada.
Northern Medical Program, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, BC, V2N 4Z9, Canada.
J Occup Med Toxicol. 2022 Jan 4;17(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s12995-021-00328-w.
Due to accelerating wildland fire activity, there is mounting urgency to understand, prevent, and mitigate the occupational health impacts associated with wildland fire suppression. The objectives of this review of academic and grey literature were to: 1. Identify the impact of occupational exposure to wildland fires on physical, mental, and emotional health; and 2. Examine the characteristics and effectiveness of prevention, mitigation, or management strategies studied to reduce negative health outcomes associated with occupational exposure to wildland fire.
Following established scoping review methods, academic literature as well as government and industry reports were identified by searching seven academic databases and through a targeted grey literature search. 4679 articles were screened using pre-determined eligibility criteria. Data on study characteristics, health outcomes assessed, prevention or mitigation strategies studied, and main findings were extracted from each included document. The results of this scoping review are presented using descriptive tables and a narrative summary to organize key findings.
The final sample was comprised of 100 articles: 76 research articles and 24 grey literature reports. Grey literature focused on acute injuries and fatalities. Health outcomes reported in academic studies focused on respiratory health (n = 14), mental health (n = 16), and inflammation and oxidative stress (n = 12). The identified studies evaluated short-term outcomes measuring changes across a single shift or wildland fire season. Most research was conducted with wildland firefighters and excluded personnel such as aviation crews, contract crews, and incident management teams. Five articles reported direct study of mitigation strategies, focusing on the potential usage of masks, advanced hygiene protocols to reduce exposure, fluid intake to manage hydration and core temperature, and glutamine supplementation to reduce fatigue.
While broad in scope, the evidence base linking wildland fire exposure to any one health outcome is limited. The lack of long-term evidence on changes in health status or morbidity is a clear evidence gap and there is a need to prioritize research on the mental and physical health impact of occupational exposure to wildland fire.
由于野火活动不断加剧,了解、预防和减轻与野火扑救相关的职业健康影响变得愈发紧迫。本次对学术文献和灰色文献的综述目标如下:1. 确定职业暴露于野火对身体、心理和情绪健康的影响;2. 研究为减少与职业暴露于野火相关的负面健康结果而采取的预防、减轻或管理策略的特点及有效性。
按照既定的范围综述方法,通过检索七个学术数据库以及有针对性地搜索灰色文献,确定了学术文献以及政府和行业报告。使用预先确定的纳入标准筛选了4679篇文章。从每篇纳入文献中提取了关于研究特征、评估的健康结果、研究的预防或减轻策略以及主要发现的数据。本次范围综述的结果通过描述性表格和叙述性总结呈现,以整理关键发现。
最终样本包括100篇文章:76篇研究论文和24篇灰色文献报告。灰色文献聚焦于急性损伤和死亡。学术研究报告的健康结果集中在呼吸健康(n = 14)、心理健康(n = 16)以及炎症和氧化应激(n = 12)。已识别的研究评估了短期结果,测量单次轮班或野火季节期间的变化。大多数研究是针对野火消防员进行的,排除了诸如航空机组人员、合同工队和事故管理团队等人员。五篇文章报告了对减轻策略的直接研究,重点关注口罩的潜在使用、先进的卫生规程以减少暴露、通过摄入液体来管理水合作用和核心体温,以及补充谷氨酰胺以减轻疲劳。
虽然范围广泛,但将野火暴露与任何一种健康结果联系起来的证据基础有限。缺乏关于健康状况变化或发病率的长期证据是一个明显的证据空白,有必要优先研究职业暴露于野火对身心健康的影响。