Shapiro Hannah F J, Gelfand Amy A, Shapiro Daniel J, Elser Holly, Chen Chen, Casey Joan A
Department of Neurology, Child & Adolescent Headache Program, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Headache. 2025 Sep 26. doi: 10.1111/head.15056.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether short-term exposure to wildfire smoke is associated with emergency department visits for headache in children and adolescents.
Wildfires are becoming increasingly common and are associated with numerous adverse health outcomes. However, we currently do not know how wildfire smoke exposure affects children and adolescents with primary headache disorders. Headache disorders in youth are a major contributor to frequently missed school days and youth with headache disorders have high medical care utilization and total healthcare costs. Therefore, understanding factors that may contribute to headache exacerbations and potential increases in healthcare utilization is of particular interest.
This was a time-stratified case-crossover study linking daily health data from the California Department of Health Care Access and Information to daily ZIP code-level wildfire PM concentrations between 2006 and 2019. We included all visits for headache to emergency departments in California among youth 5-19 years old during the study period. The primary exposure was the ZIP code-level daily wildfire-specific PM concentration, modeled as a continuous and binary (wildfire-specific PM ≥15 μg/m) variable. The primary outcome was an emergency department visit for headache. We identified relevant encounters according to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th/10th revision codes assigned in the first diagnostic position. To capture a potential delayed impact, we estimated odds ratios for the association for days 0 to 6 between the exposure and outcome.
We identified 206,230 unique emergency department encounters for primary headache disorders. Most visits were in female patients (61.4%) 15-19 years old (58.5%) who identified as Hispanic (48.8%) and lived in a very low-opportunity (37.7%) or low-opportunity (21.6%) neighborhood. The adjusted odds of an emergency department visit incrementally decreased per unit increase in wildfire-specific PM concentrations from days 0 to 6 after wildfire smoke exposure (same-day adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.00; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.998-1.001; day +6 aOR, 0.995; 95% CI, 0.993-0.997). Using a binary exposure, the adjusted odds of an emergency department visit incrementally decreased from days 0 to 6 after a wildfire smoke day (same day aOR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.92-1.08; day +6 aOR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.78-0.92).
Children are less likely to seek care in the emergency department for primary headache in the days following exposure to wildfire smoke, suggesting that healthcare utilization changes during wildfires. Clinicians should ensure youth with headache disorders who experience worsening symptoms associated with air pollution are equipped with strategies to manage their headache disorder at home during days with wildfire smoke, including effective at-home acute headache medications.
本研究旨在确定儿童和青少年短期接触野火烟雾是否与因头痛前往急诊科就诊有关。
野火日益常见,并与众多不良健康后果相关。然而,我们目前尚不清楚接触野火烟雾如何影响患有原发性头痛疾病的儿童和青少年。青少年头痛疾病是导致频繁缺课的主要原因,患有头痛疾病的青少年医疗保健利用率高,医疗总费用也高。因此,了解可能导致头痛加重以及医疗保健利用率潜在增加的因素尤为重要。
这是一项时间分层的病例交叉研究,将加利福尼亚医疗保健获取与信息部的每日健康数据与2006年至2019年期间邮政编码级别的每日野火细颗粒物浓度相关联。我们纳入了研究期间加利福尼亚州5至19岁青少年因头痛前往急诊科的所有就诊病例。主要暴露因素是邮政编码级别的每日野火特定细颗粒物浓度,建模为连续变量和二元变量(野火特定细颗粒物≥15μg/m)。主要结局是因头痛前往急诊科就诊。我们根据首次诊断位置分配的国际疾病分类第9版/第10版代码确定相关就诊病例。为了捕捉潜在的延迟影响,我们估计了暴露与结局之间第0至6天关联的比值比。
我们确定了206,230例原发性头痛疾病的独特急诊科就诊病例。大多数就诊病例为女性患者(61.4%),年龄在15至19岁之间(58.5%),自认为是西班牙裔(48.8%),居住在机会极低(37.7%)或机会低(21.6%)的社区。在接触野火烟雾后的第0至6天,野火特定细颗粒物浓度每增加一个单位,急诊科就诊的调整后比值比逐渐降低(当日调整后比值比[aOR],1.00;95%置信区间[CI],0.998 - 1.001;第 +6天aOR,0.995;95%CI,0.993 - 0.997)。使用二元暴露因素,在野火烟雾日之后的第0至6天,急诊科就诊的调整后比值比逐渐降低(当日aOR,0.99;95%CI,0.92 - 1.08;第 +6天aOR,0.84;95%CI,0.78 - 0.92)。
儿童在接触野火烟雾后的几天内因原发性头痛前往急诊科就诊的可能性较小,这表明野火期间医疗保健利用率发生了变化。临床医生应确保患有头痛疾病且症状因空气污染而恶化的青少年在野火烟雾日期间在家中具备管理头痛疾病的策略,包括有效的家庭急性头痛药物。