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Amazon Wildfires and Respiratory Health: Impacts during the Forest Fire Season from 2009 to 2019

The Brazilian Amazon, a vital tropical region, faces escalating threats from human activities, agriculture, and climate change. This study aims to assess the relationship between forest fire occurrences, meteorological factors, and hospitalizations due to respiratory diseases in the Legal Amazon reg...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2024-05, Vol.21 (6), p.675
Main Authors: Ribeiro, Maura R, Lima, Marcos V M, Ilacqua, Roberto C, Savoia, Eriane J L, Alvarenga, Rogerio, Vittor, Amy Y, Raimundo, Rodrigo D, Laporta, Gabriel Z
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creator Ribeiro, Maura R
Lima, Marcos V M
Ilacqua, Roberto C
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description The Brazilian Amazon, a vital tropical region, faces escalating threats from human activities, agriculture, and climate change. This study aims to assess the relationship between forest fire occurrences, meteorological factors, and hospitalizations due to respiratory diseases in the Legal Amazon region from 2009 to 2019. Employing simultaneous equation models with official data, we examined the association between deforestation-induced fires and respiratory health issues. Over the studied period, the Legal Amazon region recorded a staggering 1,438,322 wildfires, with 1,218,606 (85%) occurring during August-December, known as the forest fire season. During the forest fire season, a substantial portion (566,707) of the total 1,532,228 hospital admissions for respiratory diseases were recorded in individuals aged 0-14 years and 60 years and above. A model consisting of two sets of simultaneous equations was constructed. This model illustrates the seasonal fluctuations in meteorological conditions driving human activities associated with increased forest fires. It also represents how air quality variations impact the occurrence of respiratory diseases during forest fires. This modeling approach unveiled that drier conditions, elevated temperatures, and reduced precipitation exacerbate fire incidents, impacting hospital admissions for respiratory diseases at a rate as high as 22 hospital admissions per 1000 forest fire events during the forest fire season in the Legal Amazon, 2009-2019. This research highlights the urgent need for environmental and health policies to mitigate the effects of Amazon rainforest wildfires, stressing the interplay of deforestation, climate change, and human-induced fires on respiratory health.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph21060675
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subjects Adolescent
Age groups
Air pollution
Asthma
Brazil - epidemiology
Bronchitis
Carbon
Cattle
Child
Child, Preschool
Chronic illnesses
Climate Change
Data analysis
Deforestation
Epidemiology
Fires
Forest & brush fires
Forests
Health care
Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
Hospitals
Humans
Humidity
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Land use
Middle Aged
Outdoor air quality
Pneumonia
Pollutants
Precipitation
Respiratory diseases
Respiratory system
Respiratory Tract Diseases - epidemiology
Respiratory Tract Diseases - etiology
Seasons
Temperature
Variables
Wildfires
Young Adult
title Amazon Wildfires and Respiratory Health: Impacts during the Forest Fire Season from 2009 to 2019
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