How Particle Pollution Can Affect Your
Health
Particle pollution exposure can lead to a
variety of health effects. For example, numerous studies link particle levels
to increased hospital admissions and emergency room visits—and even to early
death. Research indicates that obesity or diabetes may increase risk. New
or expectant mothers may also want to take precautions to protect the health of
their babies, because some studies indicate they may be at increased risk.
Both long- and short-term particle
exposures have been linked to health Long-term exposures, such as those
experienced by people living for many years in areas with high particle levels,
have been associated with problems such as reduced lung function and the
development of chronic bronchitis—and even premature death.
Some studies also suggest that long-term PM
2.5 exposures may be linked to cancer and to harmful developmental and
reproductive effects, such as infant mortality and low birth weight.
Short-term exposures to particles (hours or
days) can aggravate lung disease, causing asthma attacks and acute bronchitis,
and may also increase susceptibility to respiratory infections.
It's important to limit your exposure to
smoke—especially if you are more susceptible than others:
·
If you have heart or lung disease, such as
congestive heart failure, angina, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
emphysema or asthma, you may experience health effects earlier and at lower
smoke levels than healthy people.
·
Older adults are more likely to be affected
by smoke, possibly because they are more likely to have chronic heart or lung
diseases than younger people.
·
Children also are more susceptible to smoke
for several reasons: their respiratory systems are still developing; they
breathe more air (and air pollution) per pound of body weight than adults; and
they're more likely to be active outdoors.
Protect Yourself!
To help protect your health and the health
of loved ones, make sure to follow these best burn tips when heating with wood:
·
Burn dry, seasoned wood that has been
split, stacked, covered and stored.
·
Test wood with a moisture meter (20 percent
moisture or less is best).
·
Use a cleaner-burning gas or wood stove.
Also, the state of Washington's Department
of Ecology has published a useful booklet entitled, Health Effects of Wood Smoke
(PDF)
(15pp, 206k, About
PDF)
EPA Burn Wise Health and
Safety Awareness Kit provides health and safety outreach
materials to help reduce residential wood smoke pollution. To promote best burn
tips, we’ve developed web-ready infographics, social media messages, fast
facts, an article template and other tools.
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