Smoke-related health costs of 2019-20 bushfires estimated at $1.95 billion

A study involving a UNSW medical researcher has estimated the smoke-related health costs of the 2019-20 fire season – and the previous 19 fire seasons.

The catastrophic 2019-20 Australian bushfire season saw smoke-related health costs climb to $1.95 billion, a study led by the University of Tasmania’s Menzies Institute for Medical Research has found.

This new research, published today in Nature Sustainability, showed that the most impacted states were New South Wales ($1.07 billion), followed by Victoria ($493 million) and Queensland ($224 million).

One of the lead authors, Nicolas Borchers Arriagada from the University of Tasmania, said the findings were a major anomaly when compared to the 20 most recent fire seasons.

“The total cost was well above the next highest estimate of $566 million in 2002-03 and more than nine times the median wildfire associated costs for the previous 19 fire seasons of $211 million.

“We estimated that the smoke-related impacts of the most recent fire season included 429 smoke-related premature deaths in addition to 3230 hospital admissions for cardiovascular and respiratory disorders and 1523 emergency attendances for asthma.”

Death and injury caused by flames from bushfires were actually the tip of the iceberg, Mr Borchers Arriagada said.

“The smoke from the fires is insidious and leaves in its wake extraordinary suffering that has, by and large, until recently been under-estimated and sidelined as a critical management issue. Many survivors of bushfire events are both physically and mentally triggered by smoke for the rest of their lives.”

UNSW Medicine Conjoint Professor Bin Jalaludin, a co-author on the research, said these health impacts were often invisible.

“Often, we can’t directly attribute these deaths to air pollution or smoke – and as a result, we sometimes don’t appreciate the damage that smoke can cause to human health.

“Our results show clearly that the 2019/20 fire season was unprecedented in terms of fire smoke health impacts. Climate change will lead to more frequent and extensive bushfires, with increasing costs for all – humans, flora and fauna – so we need to have better bushfire management programs as well as tackle climate change.”

The research used a conservative approach to the modelling and likely underestimates the true burden for different reasons, such as the exclusion of other health outcomes like mental health, or reduced productivity that affected all (or a large proportion) of the working population for self-care or to care for others with health conditions.

“Furthermore, the smoke was seen to travel to other countries – e.g. New Zealand – and even went around the globe,” Prof. Jalaludin said.

Director of the Menzies Institute, Distinguished Professor Alison Venn, said that these findings highlighted the importance of interventions such as the air monitoring app AirRater, developed by Menzies and used throughout Australia during the bushfires.

“It is increasingly clear that our bushfire response and preparedness must include smoke related measures, such as warning apps like AirRater, clean air shelters, and air filters in homes and workplaces.”

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