Photo of plume of smoke is seen rising from the North Fork fire in Jefferson County, Colorado

Health Care Facilities Maintain Indoor Air Quality Through Smoke and Wildfires

When smoke from wildfires swirls around health care facilities, prepared hospitals in California and Colorado use air quality tools to keep the indoor environment safe for patients and staff.
Lessons Learned
  • Healthcare climate resilience: With continued climate change, the threat of climate disasters and associated health risks grows. In the Western US, wildfires pose a significant threat. This study emphasizes the role of filter systems and portable scrubbers in maintaining hospital air quality during fires. Although these air quality tools were originally designed to combat airborne pathogens, they are equally effective at mitigating the effects of wildfire smoke. Sharing this information widely is crucial for hospitals in fire-prone areas to assess their preparedness and prompts nationwide consideration of climate resilience in healthcare settings.
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Climate stressors and impacts

Climate change is exacerbating the major factors that lead to wildfire: heat, drought, and dead trees. The West is particularly vulnerable to such fires. Between 1970 and 2003, warmer and drier conditions increased burned area in western U.S. mid-elevation conifer forests by 650 percent.1 As noted in the 2014 National Climate Assessment, from 1916 to 2003 climate outweighed other factors in determining burned area in the western United States. Experts project that wildfires will become even more frequent as climate change continues; projections include a doubling of burned area in the southern Rockies, and up to 74 percent more fires in California. Such wildfires pose significant dangers to hospitals’ abilities to serve their communities.

Hospitals under fire

As wildfires encroach, hospitals can be forced to evacuate, even if the fire itself is not near the building. Hospital ventilation systems require a fresh supply of outdoor air to maintain indoor air quality and pressurization; if outdoor air is contaminated by heavy smoke, it may be impossible to safely house patients and staff in the building. During wildfires, however, hospital emergency departments near the fire must remain operational to treat firefighters and affected community residents. To deal with smoke risks, hospitals in fire-prone areas can isolate emergency department ventilation systems and enable recirculated air during emergency conditions. In addition, portable air scrubbers or HEPA (high-efficiency particulate arrestance) filters can be placed in various units to capture smoke, fumes, and airborne particles if outdoor ventilation systems must be shut down.

A filter system saves the day

In 2008, southern California experienced two major wildfires: the Sesnon fire in October lasted five days and the Sayre fire in November lasted six days. The Sesnon blaze posed a major threat to Providence Holy Cross Medical Center by engulfing the facility in smoke. Later, the Sayre fire was more intense, crossing a highway and preventing 40 percent of Providence’s staff from reaching the facility. As it is the only local area trauma center in Burbank, Providence received more than 200 patients from neighboring hospitals and had to cancel all elective surgeries. Providence was able to stay open and operational through both fires, thanks in large part to its use of HEPA filters. The medical center had purchased these filters earlier for pandemic flu preparedness. The filters purify the air in a way that facilitates the central ventilation system maintaining zero pressures (critical for quarantine rooms). In this case, however, using the equipment for a different purpose enabled the hospital to remain open and functional during a fire event.2

The advantage of scrubbers

In June 2013, the Black Forest fire in Colorado forced the evacuation or pre-evacuation of approximately 300 employees of Memorial Hospital and Children’s Hospital Colorado from their homes. When Memorial Hospital received reports of the encroaching fire, the administrators immediately began preparing based on the hospital’s previous experience with the Waldo Canyon fire in 2012. Memorial’s Safety and Facilities departments began “environmental rounds,” monitoring air quality in the buildings. The team placed portable air scrubbers at Memorial Hospital North, which was nearly full with patients, and at Memorial Hospital Central. Memorial worked with building managers at off-site locations to maintain air quality in those buildings through the fire.


Relevant Options

This selection of resilience actions from our Options Database is specifically tailored to address the hazards and assets identified in this case study. To explore other resilience actions that may be applicable to your community, visit the complete Options Database.

  • 1. Melillo, Jerry M., Terese (T.C.) Richmond, and Gary W. Yohe, Eds., 2014: Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment. U.S. Global Change Research Program, 841 pp. doi:10.7930/J0Z31WJ2.
  • 2. Thomas, W. M. (2011, June 28). Code grey: Protecting hospitals from severe weather. [Web log post]
Banner Image Credit

Shawn Campbell. CC BY 2.0, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en, via Wikimedia Commons.

Last modified
12 July 2024 - 1:31pm