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Published 20:18 IST, November 28th 2024

Above 90% Of Global Deaths Linked To Pollution From Landscape Fires

Annually, over 90 per cent of death taking place in middle-income, and low-income nations are connected with landscape fires.

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Landscape fires
Landscape fires | Image: Pinterest
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Annually, over 90 per cent of death taking place in middle-income, and low-income nations are connected with landscape fires, according to The Lancet Journal.

Countries under tremendous burden due to landscape fires, inclusive of wildfires are China, Indonesia, and nations in the sub-Saharan Africa.

The findings highlighted geographic and socioeconomic inequalities in how landscape fires affect public health, an international team of researchers, including those from Monash University, Australia, found. 

Fire Forest Pictures | Download Free Images on Unsplash
The impact of landscape fires on the global death rate. Image credit: Unsplash

Key findings of The Lancet Study 

Landscape fires occur in natural and built-up settings and can include both forest fires and those caused due to human activities. Most of the resulting deaths are related to the air pollution caused due to such fires, contributing to long-term cardiovascular and respiratory illnesses. 

The study attributed roughly 0.45 million deaths a year to heart-related conditions and about 0.22 million deaths annually to respiratory diseases, revealing an increasing number of global deaths associated with pollution resulting from landscape fires.

The researchers analysed yearly deaths, population and socio-demographic data from across 204 countries and territories during 2000-2019, taken from the 2019 Global Burden of Diseases Study. It is coordinated by the Institute of Health Metrics (IHME), University of Washington, US, and provides the "largest and most comprehensive" estimates of health lost around the world over time. 

With climate change becoming more intense, the authors called for urgent action to mitigate the health effects of air pollution from landscape fires.

They also stressed on addressing the socioeconomic disparities in death rates by providing financial and technological support from high-income countries to help more vulnerable developing countries.

The team said these efforts would need to be coupled with climate mitigation and adaptation policies, to manage the health impacts of landscape fire-related air pollution.

(With PTI Inputs)

20:18 IST, November 28th 2024