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Journal Article

Citation

Hertelendy AJ, Burkle FM, Ciottone GR. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2022; 37(4): 429-430.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1049023X22000978

PMID

35818978

Abstract

Extreme heat and wildfires have health implications for everyone; however, minority and low-income populations are disproportionately negatively affected due to generations of social inequities and discriminatory practices. Indigenous people in Canada are at a higher risk of many chronic respiratory diseases, as well as other non-communicable diseases and hospitalization, compared to the general population. These wildfires occurring during the COVID-19 pandemic have demonstrated how disruptive compounding disasters can be, putting minority populations such as First Nations, Metis, and Inuit tribes at increased risk and decreased priority. Going forward, if the necessarily proactive mitigation and preparedness steps are not undertaken, the ability to attenuate health inequity in the indigenous community by building resiliency to wildfire disasters will be significantly hampered.


Language: en

Keywords

Canada; Humans; *COVID-19/epidemiology; *Plague/epidemiology; *Wildfires; Canada/epidemiology; First Nations; indigenous people; Pandemics; wildfires

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