Each fire’s impact could depend on what was burning, for how long, and levels of public awareness, researchers hypothesize.
The morning of Jan. 7, Dr. Reza Ronaghi and his wife, Nasim, left their home in California's Pacific Palisades with the clothes on their backs and work on their minds.
With Los Angeles still reeling from the devastating Palisades and Eaton fires, a new report on California blazes from earlier ...
Heavy metals detected in the soil have also created health implications for Monterey County’s agriculture industry, and the ...
"This is our Hurricane Katrina—an epochal disaster that's changing Los Angeles," said Dr. David Eisenman, whose research focuses on public health and disasters. "The fire transformed everything: our ...
Toxics in the air from urban wildfires may include dioxins, asbestos, and lead. But testing, until recently, for these air ...
Since issuing the temporary ban on power air blowers due to poor air quality from the fires ... smoke. Keep indoor air clean by closing windows and doors. Use air conditioners that recirculate air to ...
Thousands of farmworkers labored in fields in Ventura County in late January in wildfire smoke. They have little to no ...
A report published Thursday found the percentage of ED visits related to fire and smoke inhalation rose in the days after the ...
I just saw on the news that the smoke from wildfires is even worse for your health than we thought. Why is that? It seems ...
Following the devastating fires that swept through Los Angeles in January, concerns are on the rise about the long-term health impacts of smoke inhalation.