Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Smoke exposes millions to hazardous pollution

- ByMatthewB­rown and Camille Fassett

SANTA CRUZ » Wildfires churning out dense plumes of smoke as they scorch huge swaths of the U. S. West Coast have exposed millions of people to hazardous pollution levels, causing emergency room visits to spike and potentiall­y thousands of deaths among the elderly and infirm, according to an Associated Press analysis of pollution data and interviews with physicians, health authoritie­s and researcher­s.

Smoke at concentrat­ions that topped the government’s charts for health risks and lasted at least a day enshrouded counties inhabited by more than 8 million people across five states in recent weeks, AP’s analysis shows.

Major cities in Oregon, which has been especially hard hit, last month suffered the highest pollution levels they’ve ever recorded when powerful winds supercharg­ed fires that had been burning in remote areas and sent them hurtling to the edge of densely populated Portland.

Medical complicati­ons began arising while communitie­s were still enveloped in smoke, including hundreds of additional emergency room visits daily in Oregon, according to state health officials.

“It’s been brutal forme,” said Barb Trout, a 64-yearold retiree living south of Portland in the Willamette Valley. She was twice taken to the emergency room by ambulance following severe asthmatic reactions, something that had never happened to her before.

Trout had sheltered inside as soon as smoke rolled into the valley just after Labor Day but within days had an asthma attack that left her gasping for air and landed her in the ER. Two weeks later, when smoke from fires in California drifted into the valley, she had an evenmore violent reaction that Trout described as a near-death experience.

“It hit me quick and hard more so than the first one. I wasn’t hardly even breathing,” she recalled. After getting stabilized with drugs, Trout was sent home but the specter of a third at

tack now haunts her. She and her husband installed an alarm system so she can press a panic button when in distress to call for help.

“It’s put a whole new level on my life,” she said. “I’m tryingnot to live in fear, but I’ve got to be really really cautious.”

In nearby Salem, Trout’s pulmonolog­ist Martin Johnson said people with existing respirator­y issues started showing up at his hospital or calling his office almost immediatel­y after the smoke arrived, many struggling to breathe. Salem is in Marion county, which experience­d eight days of pollution at hazardous levels during a short period, some of the worst conditions seen the West over the past two decades, according to AP’s analysis.

Most of Johnson’s patients are expected to recover but he said some could have permanent loss of lung function. Then there are the “hidden” victims who Johnson suspects died from heart attacks or other problems triggered by the poor air quality but whose cause of death will be chalked up to something else.

“Many won’t show up at the hospital or they’ll die at home or they’ll show up at hospice for other reasons, such as pneumonia or other complicati­ons,” Johnson said.

Based on prior studies of pollution-related deaths and the number of people exposed to recent fires, researcher­s at Stanford University estimated that as many as 3,000 people over 65 in California alone died prematurel­y after being exposed to smoke during a six-week period beginning Aug. 1. Hundreds more deaths could have occurred in Washington over several weeks of poor air caused by the fires, according to University of Washington researcher­s.

Wildfires are a regular occurrence in Western states but they’ve grown more intense and dangerous as a changing climate dries out forests thick with trees and underbrush from decades of fire suppressio­n. What makes the smoke from these fires dangerous are particles too small for the naked eye to see that can be breathed in and cause respirator­y problems.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Sept. 9at 11:18a.m., a dark orange sky above Crissy Field in San Francisco is seen. It was caused by heavy smoke from wildfires.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Sept. 9at 11:18a.m., a dark orange sky above Crissy Field in San Francisco is seen. It was caused by heavy smoke from wildfires.

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