HALF MILLION ACRES CHARRED
IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FIRES
Wildfires from Simi Valley to San Diego have killed 15 people, destroyed 1,100 homes and burned 500,000 acres of land.
UC Irvine experts in air pollution, respiratory problems and coping with trauma
Large Scale Forest Fires Raise Ozone Pollutant Levels
The product
of the large-scale forest fires is easy to see-thick, dark smoke filling the
skies. But downwind, gaseous emissions from fires create a pollutant invisible
to the eye, but no less dangerous - ozone.
Atmospheric
chemist Donald Blake, who studies the impact of biomass burning on the
atmosphere, says that when sunlight combines with nitrogen oxides and
hydrocarbons in the smoke, resulting chemical reactions form ozone, and lots of
it. These enhanced concentrations of ozone can blow around for several weeks,
Blake adds. The result is air quality downwind from fires that can reach
hazardous levels. Ozone's
effect on
humans can range from eye irritation to worsening existing lung conditions such
as asthma.
To
interview Blake, contact Iqbal Pittalwala at (949) 824-3969, (949) 230-8962 or
iqbal@uci.edu.
Air Pollution May Affect Children More Harshly
While air
pollution can have ill effects on all people, children are likely to face
greater risks of developing lung diseases from pollutants in smog. Robert
Phalen, director of UCI's Air Pollution Health Effects Laboratory, has spent
more than 20 years studying the link between air pollutants and asthma,
bronchitis and emphysema. Currently, Phalen is taking part in a large
Environmental Protection Agency effort to
calculate
the lung volume difference between children and adults in relationship to the
unique exposures and amounts of pollutants that enter their lungs. Children
breathe in more air per pound than adults,
and their
airways are more efficient in trapping pollutants. "Because of this, air
pollution can affect children up to nine times more harshly than adults," Phalen
said. "Studies like these help us learn to predict how air pollution levels will
affect children by what we know of their impact on adults. This is important,
because asthma has become the No. 1 chronic disease keeping kids out of school."
In addition, Phalen's latest book, "The Particulate Air Pollution Controversy,"
looks at the cause and effect relationship between air pollution and human
health.
To
interview Phalen, contact Iqbal Pittalwala at (949) 824-3969, (949) 230-8962 or
iqbal@uci.edu.
Freeway Exhaust May Accelerate Lung Conditions
Michael
Kleinman, a community and environmental health and medicine researcher at UCI,
is the chair of the State of California Environmental Protection Agency Air
Quality Advisory Committee. He is is covering how vehicle exhaust from heavily
trafficked freeways accelerates lung conditions including asthma. In current
research, Kleinman is discovering that diesel particles may also affect the
heart and brain.
To
interview Kleinman, contact Iqbal Pittalwala at (949) 824-3969, (949) 230-8962
or iqbal@uci.edu.
Best Way to Avoid Fire's Health Effects: Stay Inside
Drs. Henri
Colt and James Roum are clinical professors and pulmonologists at UCI Medical
Center in Orange. They are experts in lung and respiratory problems and can
address questions about medical issues related to recent fires in Southern
California.
To
interview Drs. Colt or Roum, contact Kim Pine at (714) 456-7759; pager (714)
506-0472 or
kpine@uci.edu.
Coping with the Trauma of a Natural Disaster
Roxane
Cohen Silver, professor of psychology and social behavior, has expertise in
coping with trauma and grief. She examines cognitive, emotional, social and
physical responses to stressful life events-including natural disasters - in
order to identify factors that facilitate successful adjustment to them. In a
study funded by the National Science Foundation, Silver looked at Laguna Beach
and Malibu residents' psychological responses to the 1993 Southern California
firestorms. She is currently principal investigator of a national longitudinal
study of psychological responses to the September 11th terrorist
attacks. She also explores long-term effects of traumatic experiences,
considering how beliefs and expectations of the social network impact the coping
process. Silver is a fellow of both the American Psychological Association and
the American Psychological Society.
To
interview Cohen Silver, contact Lori Brandt at (949) 824-5484, (949) 285-5484 or
lbrandt@uci.edu.
NEWS
RADIO: UCI maintains on campus an ISDN for conducting interviews with its
faculty and experts. The use of this line is available free-of-charge to radio
news programs/stations who wish to interview UCI
faculty and
experts. Use of ISDN line limited by availability and approval by the
university.
TELEVISION:
UCI maintains relationships with off-campus studio facilities available for hire
by programmers and stations.
UCI
maintains an online directory of faculty available as experts to the media. To
access, visit: www.today.uci.edu/experts.