Gao Yuan, Huang Wenzhong, Yu Pei, Xu Rongbin, Yang Zhengyu, Gasevic Danijela, Ye Tingting, Guo Yuming, Li Shanshan
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia.
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia; Centre for Global Health, Usher Institute, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Environ Pollut. 2023 Mar 1;320:121041. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.121041. Epub 2023 Jan 10.
The intensity and frequency of wildfires is increasing globally. The systematic review of the current evidence on long-term impacts of non-occupational wildfire exposure on human health has not been performed yet. To provide a systematic review and identify potential knowledge gaps in the current evidence of long-term impacts of non-occupational exposure to wildfire smoke and/or wildfire impacts on human health. We conducted a systematic search of the literature via MEDLINE, Embase and Scopus from the database inception to July 05, 2022. References from the included studies and relevant reviews were also considered. The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) and a validated quality assessment framework were used to evaluate the quality of observational studies. Study results were synthesized descriptively. A total of 36 studies were included in our systematic review. Most studies were from developed countries (11 in Australia, 9 in Canada, 7 in the United States). Studies predominantly focused on mental health (21 studies, 58.33%), while evidence on long-term impacts of wildfire exposure on health outcomes other than mental health is limited. Current evidence indicated that long-term impacts of non-occupational wildfire exposure were associated with mortality (COVID-19 mortality, cardiovascular disease mortality and acute myocardial disease mortality), morbidity (mainly respiratory diseases), mental health disorders (mainly posttraumatic stress disorder), shorter height of children, reduced lung function and poorer general health status. However, no significant associations were observed for long-term impacts of wildfire exposure on child mortality and respiratory hospitalizations. The population-based high-quality evidence with quantitative analysis on this topic is still limited. Future well-designed studies considering extensive wildfire smoke air pollutants (e.g., particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen oxides) and estimating risk coefficient values for extensive health outcomes (e.g., mortality, morbidity) are warranted to fill current knowledge gaps.
全球范围内,野火的强度和频率都在增加。目前尚未对非职业性野火暴露对人类健康的长期影响的现有证据进行系统综述。为了进行系统综述并确定当前关于非职业性接触野火烟雾和/或野火对人类健康的长期影响的证据中的潜在知识空白。我们通过MEDLINE、Embase和Scopus对从数据库创建到2022年7月5日的文献进行了系统检索。还考虑了纳入研究和相关综述的参考文献。使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表(NOS)和经过验证的质量评估框架来评估观察性研究的质量。对研究结果进行了描述性综合。我们的系统综述共纳入了36项研究。大多数研究来自发达国家(澳大利亚11项,加拿大9项,美国7项)。研究主要集中在心理健康方面(21项研究,占58.33%),而关于野火暴露对心理健康以外的健康结果的长期影响的证据有限。目前的证据表明,非职业性野火暴露的长期影响与死亡率(新冠死亡率、心血管疾病死亡率和急性心肌疾病死亡率)、发病率(主要是呼吸道疾病)、精神健康障碍(主要是创伤后应激障碍)、儿童身高较矮、肺功能下降和总体健康状况较差有关。然而,未观察到野火暴露对儿童死亡率和呼吸道住院的长期影响有显著关联。关于这一主题的基于人群的高质量定量分析证据仍然有限。未来有必要开展精心设计的研究,考虑广泛的野火烟雾空气污染物(如颗粒物、臭氧、氮氧化物),并估计广泛健康结果(如死亡率、发病率)的风险系数值,以填补当前的知识空白。