Wildfire Smoke Linked to Severe Lung Injuries and Elevated Cancer Risk, Experts Warn
Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · Apr 21
Wildfire Smoke Linked to Severe Lung Injuries and Elevated Cancer Risk, Experts Warn
14 articles · Updated · Gizmodo · Apr 21
New research and medical cases highlight growing health risks linked to wildfire smoke exposure, including respiratory damage and increased cancer risk.
Doctors report severe lung injuries from smoke inhalation, while a major study finds long-term exposure raises the risk of several cancers, including lung and bladder.
Experts warn that as wildfires intensify due to climate change, broader populations, especially those with health conditions, face heightened dangers from toxic smoke.
Beyond cancer, what other long-term diseases are being silently caused by wildfire smoke?
Are lower-income communities disproportionately bearing the health burden of wildfire smoke exposure?
If smoke toxins reach the bloodstream, are any organs truly safe from their effects?
Is living in a city hundreds of miles from a wildfire still a major cancer risk?
How can you know if past smoke exposure has already increased your cancer risk?
Are controlled burns a safe solution, or do they just trade one smoke risk for another?