Why is wildfire smoke so bad for your lungs?

Don't count on cloth masks to protect you.

A wildfire grows near a home on Twilight Lane in Santa Cruz, California, on Aug. 19, 2020.
A wildfire grows near a home on Twilight Lane in Santa Cruz, California, on Aug. 19, 2020.
(Image credit: Randy Vazquez/MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images)

If I dare to give the coronavirus credit for anything, I would say it has made people more conscious of the air they breathe.

A friend texted me this week after going for a jog in the foothills near Boise, Idaho, writing: "My lungs are burning … explain what's happening!!!"

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Luke Montrose
Assistant Professor of Community and Environmental Health, Boise State University

Luke Montrose is an environmental toxicologist and an assistant professor in the Department of Community and Environmental Health at Boise State University in Idaho, with research interests in public health, epigenetics and chronic illness, particularly as it relates to vulnerable and understudied populations. Luke received his doctorate in Environmental Toxicology from the University of Montana.