Published Date: March 09, 2024

Summary: Many studies have investigated the association between various health outcomes from PM2.5 (particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 2.5 μm) exposure, but there are still uncertainties on the full extent of the acute health impact of short-term PM exposure such as work loss due to sickness (i.e., headache) that was not severe enough to warrant admission to an emergency or hospital; thus, it could not be fully incorporated into the calculation of air pollution exposure-associated health and economic cost.

In this study, authors evaluated the health and economic impacts of work loss due to sickness associated with daily all-source and wildfire-specific PM2.5 exposures in California. They linked the 2015–2018 California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) respondents’ geocoded home addresses to daily PM2.5 estimated by satellites and atmospheric modelling simulations and wildfire-related PM2.5 from Community Multiscale Air Quality models, and calculated and applied the coefficient for the association between daily PM2.5 exposure and work loss from regression analyses to the Environmental Benefits Mapping and Analysis Program—Community Edition (BenMAP-CE) platform.

Findings: Authors observed that each 1 µg/m3 increase in daily total PM2.5 exposure will lead to about 1 million days of work loss per year ranging from 1.1 to 1.6 million person-days, and the related economic loss was $310–390 million. Wildfire smoke alone could contribute to 0.7–2.6 million work-loss days with a related economic loss of $129–521 million per year in 2015–2018. Using the function coefficient in the current BenMAP, the excess work-loss days due to sickness was about 250,00 days and the estimated economic loss was about $45–50 million for each 1 µg/m3 increase in daily total PM2.5 exposure, and wildfire smoke alone would lead to 0.17–0.67 million work-loss days with related economic loss of $31–128 million per year during the same period.

Both conventional and wildfire-specific sources of PM2.5 produced substantial work loss and cost in California. Authors state that updating the current BenMAP-CE calculations for work-loss days will be essential in quantifying the current health impacts of PM2.5 to help inform the policies and regulations to protect public health.

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