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Climate change and wildland firefighter health and safety

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Article

Withen, Patrick

New Solutions

2015

24

4

577-584

climate change ; fatalities ; fire ; frequency rates ; occupational accidents ; occupational injury

Occupational risks

https://journals.sagepub.com/loi/NEW

http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/NS.24.4.i

English

Bibliogr.

"The author examines how climate change is impacting wildland firefighters. Climate change has made wildland fires more frequent and more intense. The increase in frequency and intensity of fires has pushed the number of fatalities and injuries higher in recent decades. The most common hazards on fires follow the trend of fire in general in that these hazards become more frequent and intense. Burnovers, heat exhaustion, tree hazards, and many other common fire hazards are more likely. The fire suppression agencies are making every effort to improve health and safety on fires by improving communication, weather forecasting, mapping, fire shelters, decision making and more. Despite these efforts, wildfires are becoming ever more hazardous because of climate change and the increasing frequency and intensity of wildfires."

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