Disruption of outdoor activities caused by wildfires increases disease circulation

Abstract

Although climate change poses a well-established risk to human health, present-day health impacts, particularly those resulting from climate-induced behavioral changes, are under-quantified. Analyzing the U.S. West Coast wildfires of September 2020, we found that poor air quality drives people indoors, increasing the circulation of airborne pathogens like COVID-19. Indoor masking rates as low as 10% can mitigate this risk, offering a clear path to enhance public health responses during wildfires.

Publication
In medRxiv

The project behind this study started at the 2023 of the workshop Complexity72h which we organize every year.

You can access the workshop report here: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.07.09.23292078v1

Claudio Ascione
Claudio Ascione
PhD student
Eugenio Valdano
Eugenio Valdano
Principal Investigator