Wildland Fireas a Public Health and EMS Crisis: Evolving Threats and Imperatives for Out-of-Hospital Leadership
Recommended Citation
Drury BR, Baskin D, Curry MM, Garcia CM, and Hawkins SC. Wildland Fire as a Public Health and EMS Crisis: Evolving Threats and Imperatives for Out-of-Hospital Leadership. Prehosp Emerg Care 2025;1-5.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-23-2026
Publication Title
Prehospital emergency care
Abstract
Wildland fire in the United States has evolved into a sustained public health emergency with direct and escalating implications for emergency medical services (EMS). Once viewed primarily as a forestry issue, modern wildfire is now driven by climate change, decades of fuel accumulation, expansion of the wildland-urban interface, and ecosystem degradation. Fire seasons have lengthened into year-round events, generating substantial health impacts and placing severe strain on out-of-hospital systems. The population health consequences of wildfire exposure are extensive. Acute smoke inhalation increases asthma exacerbations, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease presentations, cardiovascular events, and premature mortality. Repeated or chronic exposure contributes to long-term pulmonary dysfunction, elevated malignancy risk, and behavioral health morbidity. Children, older adults, individuals with preexisting conditions, and socioeconomically disadvantaged communities experience disproportionate harm. Simultaneously, wildfires cause surges in EMS call volume while disrupting communications, transportation, and access to definitive care. Prehospital clinicians and responders also face significant occupational hazards, including extreme heat, prolonged particulate exposure, musculoskeletal trauma, behavioral health stressors, and an elevated risk of sudden cardiac death. As EMS agencies are increasingly tasked with austere fireground support, extended evacuations, and prolonged operations, the role of EMS physicians becomes critical. However, despite the scale of these challenges, prehospital physicians are often underrepresented in regional wildfire mitigation, preparedness, and resilience planning. National recommendations now call for a strategic shift from reactive suppression to proactive, interdisciplinary collaboration. Prehosptial physicians are uniquely positioned to integrate clinical care, disaster medicine, occupational health, and community preparedness. Their leadership is essential to ensure EMS integration into community wildfire protection plans; to strengthen occupational and mental health support for responders; to guide wildfire-specific training, triage, and protocol development; and to inform public education efforts. Prehospital physicians must also advocate for policies that incorporate out-of-hospital perspectives into resilience funding and mitigation initiatives. In summary, wildland fire is a chronic societal crisis with expanding health and EMS implications. Meeting this challenge requires prehospital physicians to broaden their roles as clinicians, educators, advocates, and policy leaders to support a more fire-adapted and resilient future.
PubMed ID
41385724
ePublication
ePub ahead of print
First Page
1
Last Page
5
