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Rapid Review: What effect does wearing a face mask during combustion-derived air pollution episodes have on human health endpoints?

traduction en cours

There is a lack of published evidence on the effects of mask-wearing on health during combustion-derived air pollution episodes, such as wildfires.


Référence :

Neil-Sztramko, S.E., Traynor, R.L., Camargo, K., Tutt, E., Dobbins, M. (2024, December 20). Rapid Review: What effect does wearing a face mask during combustion-derived air pollution episodes have on human health endpoints? National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools’ Rapid Evidence Service. https://nccmt.ca/pdfs/res/wildfire-masks

Sujet de santé publique :

Public Health

Question de la revue :
Population
General population exposed in residential environments (both indoor and outdoor), clean air spaces, public/institutional buildings (e.g., schools, daycares, malls, libraries, community centres, healthcare centres, long-term care centres, etc.), vehicles
Intervention
Face mask (including N95 respirators or similar, procedure masks, three-layer cloth masks, other cloth masks)
Comparaison
Not wearing a face mask
Résultats
Any direct or indirect, acute or long-term health outcomes; use of emergency services, emergency room visits, or hospitalizations; or cellular-level outcomes* (e.g., inflammation markers, oxidative stress)
Contexte
Any country
Contexte
During combustion-derived air pollution episodes that may be caused by fire (wildland, coal mine fires, peat fires, interface fires, landscape fires, agricultural fires, prescribed burns, industrial fires, landfill fires, tire fires, any multi-day structural fires (e.g., 9/11), and residential wood combustion (i.e., wood stoves), including studies that use source attribution methods)
Recherche mise à jour :

21 novembre 2024

Recherche terminée :

20 décembre 2024