U.S. study links Canadian wildfire smoke to doctor visit spike in Baltimore
TORONTO — Raging Canadian wildfires that choked North America under clouds of smoke last year may have contributed to a spike in doctor visits for lung and heart problems thousands of kilometres away, according to peer-reviewed findings published Friday.
The study from U.S. researchers suggests doctor visits in the Baltimore area for heart and lung problems increased by almost 20 per cent on six “hot spot” days linked to wildfire smoke from Western Canada.
“Large and highly populous geographic regions not traditionally regarded as susceptible to the adverse effects of wildfire smoke, such as in the Eastern U.S., may nonetheless experience adverse health consequences associated with smoke from wildfires originating from remote distances,” reads the study in JAMA Network Open, a peer-reviewed journal published by the American Medical Association.
Canada’s worst wildfire season on record saw plumes of smoke drift across the continent made up of fine-particle pollution that’s tiny enough to get deep in the lungs and create serious health effects.

