2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159218
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Environmental justice analysis of wildfire-related PM2.5 exposure using low-cost sensors in California

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Cited by 27 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…All but two of our participants asserted that this exposure had increased in frequency and intensity over the past decade as a result of increases in vehicular traffic, population, chemical emissions from industrial sources and other forms of human activity, wildfires and deforestation, and a lack of concern for the environment. Apart from the increase in wildfire smoke in recent years [ 22 ], these findings are not consistent with studies documenting a decline in PM 2.5 in the Los Angeles Basin over the past 40 years [ 48 ]. However, these individuals have a higher likelihood of living in areas of the US with greater exposure to air pollution, and its impacts occur due to discrimination and segregation [ 22 , 49 , 50 ].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
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“…All but two of our participants asserted that this exposure had increased in frequency and intensity over the past decade as a result of increases in vehicular traffic, population, chemical emissions from industrial sources and other forms of human activity, wildfires and deforestation, and a lack of concern for the environment. Apart from the increase in wildfire smoke in recent years [ 22 ], these findings are not consistent with studies documenting a decline in PM 2.5 in the Los Angeles Basin over the past 40 years [ 48 ]. However, these individuals have a higher likelihood of living in areas of the US with greater exposure to air pollution, and its impacts occur due to discrimination and segregation [ 22 , 49 , 50 ].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
“…Apart from the increase in wildfire smoke in recent years [ 22 ], these findings are not consistent with studies documenting a decline in PM 2.5 in the Los Angeles Basin over the past 40 years [ 48 ]. However, these individuals have a higher likelihood of living in areas of the US with greater exposure to air pollution, and its impacts occur due to discrimination and segregation [ 22 , 49 , 50 ]. As noted earlier, 85% of the participants in this study lived in census tracts that were refined as vulnerable communities based on a CalEnvironScreen score above the 75th percentile of census tracts in the state of California.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
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“…We did not estimate wild re impacts on air quality indoors, where people spend most of their time (51). Low-cost air quality sensors (e.g., PurpleAir sensors) could help provide part of this information, though they are differentially located in wealthier communities (45,52,53). Evidence suggests that populations in wealthier counties more often Google "air lter" and stay fully indoors at home on heavy wild re smoke days compared to populations in lower income counties (45).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rise of low-cost, crowdsourced sensor networks has greatly increased the spatiotemporal monitoring of PM2.5 monitoring in the United States. Low-cost sensors can report measurements publicly in real-time (Snyder et al, 2013), and recent studies have focused on their calibration (Barkjohn et al, 2021;Delp and Singer, 2020;deSouza et al, 2022), ability to capture wildfire smoke in the wildland-urban interface (Burke et al, 2022;Holder et al, 2020;Kramer et al, 2023), and skill in characterizing indoor PM2.5 from outdoor pollution (Liang et al, 2021;May et al, 2021). While low-cost sensor networks monitoring PM2.5 in urban areas are available, these networks are largely designed by volunteers or are focused on points of interest (e.g., hospitals, elderly care homes, or bus stops) (Esie et al, 2022;Frederickson et al, 2022;Mousavi et al, 2021;Sun et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%