Wildfires that keep us inside might drive the spread of infectious disease, per study of the U.S. West Coast wildfires of 2020 (IMAGE)
Caption
Air Quality level during the West Coast wildfire season in 2020. (a) Air Quality Index extracted for PM2.5 particle pollution for all counties in Oregon (OR), Washington (WA), and California (CA). Horizontal line at 150 indicates the Air Quality Index (AQI) threshold for health concerns; (b) The map highlights in dark red the most affected counties in Oregon (OR) and Washington (WA) that were included in our study. The orange counties represent unaffected areas used as a baseline. Both affected and unaffected counties are part of the Northern Indoor Seasonality Cluster (in dark grey). Base layer: https://www2.census.gov/geo/tiger/GENZ2020/shp/cb_2020_us_county_20m.zip.
Shift in human behaviors due to wildfire smoke.
The figure shows the indoor activity seasonality index between July 1, 2020, and November, 01, 2020 in the 10 selected affected counties: Multnomah County (Portland City), Washington County, Clackamas County, Lane County, Marion County in Oregon state, and King County (Seattle city), Spokane County, Yakima County, Clark County, Thurston County in Washington state. In each subplot, we also show in yellow the median and 95% CI of the indoor activity seasonality index for the unaffected counties that we used as a baseline. The violet curves represent the AQI of the affected counties during the studied period.
Credit
Image Credit: Arregui-García et al., 2025, PLOS Climate, CC-BY 4.0
Usage Restrictions
Credit must be given to the creator.
License
CC BY