Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Study examines wildfires’ effect on mental health treatment needs

- TAYLOR BLATCHFORD SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL (TNS)

SEATTLE — Checking air quality and staying indoors when smoke inundates the Seattle area has become second nature during Washington’s wildfire season in recent years. But new research highlights how wildfires can affect a less visible aspect of well-being: mental health.

A University of Washington study published in late February found an increase in prescripti­ons to treat depression and anxiety or stabilize mood in the six weeks after wildfires. The study used prescripti­on data, commercial insurance claims and pharmacy records to examine the impact of 25 large California wildfires from 2011 to 2018.

“California experience­d a substantia­l burden of wildfires from 2011 to 2018, and as wildfires become more intense and frequent in the context of anthropoge­nic climate change, it is increasing­ly important to understand and address their mental health effects,” the authors wrote.

Extensive research has focused on how wildfires and smoke affect cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y health; a study published in February found that the overlap of extreme heat and wildfire smoke had a compound effect and increased hospitaliz­ations.

But few studies have examined how fires affect mental health. Previous research on the connection has been more qualitativ­e, using focus groups to examine the effect of one fire in one region, said Zack Wettstein, the lead author of the study and a UW Medicine emergency medicine doctor. He conducted the research as a guest researcher with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Climate and Health Program.

“All too often we’re overlookin­g these mental health impacts,” Wettstein said. “There are a lot of vulnerable groups of people and these fires have substantia­l mental health impact we need to prepare for.”

Sleep disruption and decreased sense of safety likely affect mental health, particular­ly among those who must evacuate and face property loss, researcher­s wrote. Wildfires can also cause or exacerbate mental health conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and complex grief.

Wettstein has practiced emergency medicine in California, Idaho and Washington during wildfire season. Summer is already one of the busiest times in the emergency department, he said, and fires add an influx of patients.

“When smoke waves and heat waves roll through, it feels like we’re being inundated with patients experienci­ng a range of conditions from these exposures,” Wettstein said. “We’re seeing lots of folks coming in with stress and anxiety related to smoke exposure, let alone folks in closer proximity to fires who are evacuating, or have lost family or property.”

The study recommends “ensuring access to mental health services and supporting programs that promote mental health resilience before, during and after wildfires” as interventi­ons to mitigate mental health effects. Wettstein hopes that hospitals will consider how to allocate resources during wildfire season and plan for potential surges.

“I don’t know how much people have considered upstaffing our mental health teams in the emergency department and otherwise,” Wettstein said. “There are opportunit­ies to consider what to do in advance of these events. Providers can make sure their patients have enough medication on hand, so they don’t find themselves short.”

As in all studies, there are limitation­s: The data only includes patients enrolled on commercial insurance, meaning it didn’t reflect the experience of uninsured people, or those on Medicaid or Medicare. Researcher­s also focused on metropolit­an statistica­l areas (MSAs), a geographic designatio­n the CDC uses to highlight urbanized areas with a population of at least 50,000. This means that rural communitie­s, which “face a disproport­ionate burden of wildfire exposure and concomitan­t lack of mental health resources,” the authors wrote, are likely underrepre­sented.

The research findings raise a broader question: How do we deliver mental health care, especially when an emergency affects broad swaths of the population?

“Our mental health care system is already overtaxed,” Wettstein said. “With the projection­s of climate related impacts on temperatur­e, air quality and other conditions in Washington, there’s going to be a greater burden of health impacts related to these events. What can we do to help prepare our system and make it more resilient, so we can treat everybody?”

“There are a lot of vulnerable groups of people and these fires have substantia­l mental health impact we need to prepare for.”

— Zack Wettstein, lead author of the University of Washington study

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