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For Wildfire Safety, Only Particular Masks Guard Against Toxic Particulate Matter

Some health care experts recommend the use of N95 respirator masks to help protect against wildfire smoke. Simple dust or surgical masks do not offer the same kind of protection, they warn. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. 鈥 Toby Lewsadder stepped outside an Ace Hardware store wearing a simple one-strap dust mask. He knew it wasn鈥檛 the right defense against the wildfire smoke lingering in the air, but it was all he could find.

The local hardware stores he checked Tuesday didn鈥檛 have the more substantial respirator mask that public health officials recommend to defend against the harmful wildfire smoke that is blanketing communities across the state. One pharmacy he contacted was selling loose-fitting surgical masks for only a quarter.

鈥淣o one has them,鈥 said Lewsadder, 41, who was visiting the state capital from Los Angeles for an IT conference. So, for now, the dust mask would have to do: 鈥淪omething is better than nothing,鈥 he said.

Unfortunately, Lewsadder is wrong.

The type of mask you wear matters very much if you don鈥檛 want to inhale harmful pollutants, experts say.

Toby Lewsadder of Los Angeles, who was visiting Sacramento on Tuesday for a conference, wears a dust mask because that is the only one he could find at a local hardware store. Many Sacramento-area stores ran out of the recommended N95 masks. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)

And as聽聽burn in Northern and Southern California, destroying communities and lives, millions of people outside the burn zones are exposed to the dangerous smoke that鈥檚 billowing into their communities and settling like dark shrouds.

Wildfire smoke聽is dangerous聽because it contains fine particulates that can lodge deep into the lungs, which聽can cause or worsen聽respiratory issues, such as asthma. Some groups are especially vulnerable, including children and older people.

The particulate matter floating across much of Northern California in the past week has registered more than 18 times the recommended levels by the聽. Such levels can trigger acute symptoms like difficulty breathing and headaches 鈥 even in otherwise healthy people.

Health experts agree that the best defense is to stay indoors.

But many also suggest that if you must go outside for a prolonged period, it鈥檚 best to wear the right kind of mask 鈥 especially if you have a health condition such as asthma, heart problems or emphysema.

One fire station in downtown Sacramento temporarily ran out of N95 masks Tuesday. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)

Health professionals and firefighters are fitted for the right mask, but the general public is not.

So what kind of mask is the best?

Not the dust mask that Lewsadder was wearing. Or the surgical masks that loop around your ears. Forget wearing a bandana or holding a tissue over your mouth 鈥 those won鈥檛 protect your lungs.

The California Governor鈥檚 Office of Emergency Services and the California Department of Public Health recommend 聽respirators or 鈥淧100鈥 masks, both of which are approved by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health for health care workers and firefighters.

Those simple-but-sophisticated masks are intended to block at least 95 percent of the hazardous and tiny particulate matter 鈥 known as PM2.5聽鈥 that spews from wildfire smoke. At 2.5 microns or less in diameter, the particles of PM2.5 can鈥檛 even be seen by the naked eye, said Dr. John Balmes, a professor of environmental health sciences at the University of California-Berkeley. (For comparison, a human hair can measure as little as 16 microns in diameter.)

Once you find the right kind of mask, it’s also important

The mask should have two straps. One strap should be placed below the ears and one above. And the mask should seal tightly to your face.

鈥淭he efficiency of the mask is all about how well it fits the contours of your face,鈥 said Keith Bein, an associate professional researcher with the Air Quality Research Center at the University of California-Davis. 鈥淚f there鈥檚 a gap, air will come through the gap.鈥

But if you have difficulty breathing or become dizzy, remove the mask.

When a disposable mask gets dirty inside or you have trouble breathing, throw it out.

(Story continues below.)

To the worry of some parents, the N95 masks aren鈥檛 small enough for most children. Balmes, a medical doctor, said he tells his colleagues that they can put adult masks on their children, but he can鈥檛 promise they will work.

In Sacramento, since the Camp Fire devastated the Sierra Nevada foothills town of Paradise about 90 miles north, the typically blue skies appear overcast. In reality, it鈥檚 a smoky haze that has settled over the trees and buildings, leaving an acrid taste in people鈥檚 mouths and irritating their eyes.

Air-quality levels in the region have been in the 鈥渦nhealthy,鈥 鈥渧ery unhealthy鈥 or 鈥溾 ranges for .

Area residents have received mixed messages about whether to wear masks. Sacramento County鈥檚 public health division saying that only those people living near the fire should wear masks because they restrict airflow and can make it more difficult to breathe. Meanwhile, the city of Sacramento is distributing free masks to the public at fire stations.

鈥淭here is confusion, and I think one of the problems is there is not enough evidence-based medicine on whether healthy individuals should be putting on these masks and when it’s effective,鈥 said Mary Prunicki, a medical researcher and instructor at Stanford University鈥檚 Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy & Asthma Research. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something we鈥檙e actually trying to investigate.鈥

Leland Gilmore walks his dog, Ruff, at McKinley Park in Sacramento. The hazy skies don鈥檛 bother him, he says, and the smoke wasn鈥檛 bad enough to warrant a mask. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)

Sisco Martinez of Sacramento wears his N95 mask after picking one up from a local fire station. The city of Sacramento is giving away these masks at fire stations. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)

Despite the mixed messages and poor air quality, many people in the state capital appear to be going about their business as usual. Leland Gilmore, 77, who was walking his dog, Ruff, in McKinley Park near downtown, didn鈥檛 think the smoke 鈥渨as bad enough鈥 to stay inside. Neither did the people shooting hoops, playing tennis and jogging at the same park.

鈥淚鈥檓 concerned, yes, but I鈥檓 not taking any special measures,鈥 said Gail Peoples, 61, on her late-morning walk with her two dogs. 鈥淭his time of day seems OK.鈥

However, Peoples said she is worried about older family members, like her mother-in-law who has pulmonary issues and hasn鈥檛 left the house for a week.

Peoples knows there鈥檚 a special mask but doesn鈥檛 know what she should look for.

When Sisco Martinez, who doesn鈥檛 suffer from any asthma or respiratory issues, felt some chest pain, he visited a Sacramento fire station for a mask.

鈥淚 work indoors, but still, I wasn鈥檛 feeling too well, so I thought I鈥檇 better go get one,鈥 said Martinez, 19.

Experts acknowledge that the masks don鈥檛 block all the toxins in the air 鈥 the chemical gases, for example, released into the atmosphere when fire engulfs neighborhoods and the construction materials, cars, paint and other consumer goods that people use every day.

鈥淭he masks are only removing particulate matter,鈥 Bein said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 remove the toxic gases.鈥

Still, Bein said, the proper masks are 鈥渟till working better than nothing.鈥

This story was produced by聽, which publishes聽, an editorially independent service of the聽.

Related Topics

California Public Health