Hot, Dusty, and Smoky: Navigating Extremes, Climate Change Impacts on OEH

Hot, Dusty, and Smoky: Navigating Extremes, Climate Change Impacts on OEH

Conference Sessions are Now Available Online, On-Demand

Climate change is pressing public health crisis that is already impacting the world of work. Join the Northern California Centers for Occupational and Environmental Health for a deep dive into the chemical, biological, and physical hazards of navigating climate extremes. Learn about the rising prevalence of Valley Fever, a fungal infection caused by inhaling dust or soil particles, particularly in drought-affected regions. Discuss the impacts of rising temperatures on worker safety, heat-related illness, and challenges faced by indoor and outdoor workers including in warehouses and construction. Explore emerging research on the health impacts of wildfire smoke and debris exposure, and the role of protective measures, especially for vulnerable populations.

Learning Objectives:

At the completion of this activity, the learner will be able to:

  • Identify specific climate-related health effects that impact indoor and outdoor workers

  • Describe how climate change creates new or unanticipated health problems in people or places where they may not have not been before

  • Screen for risk factors that would make workers at a higher risk and more vulnerable to climate-related health impacts

  • Discuss how climate change can exacerbate the seriousness or increase the frequency of health problems workers already face.

Audience

This symposium is intended for occupational and environmental health and safety professionals and clinicians including MD / DO, nurse practitioners, physican assistants, registered nurses, registered environmental health specialists, industrial hygienists, certified safety professionals, ergonomists, researchers, and other allied health professionals.  

Presentations Include:

Emerging Biological Hazards 

(Re)-Emerging Vector-Borne Diseases in the Era of Climate Change with Angel N. Desai, MD, MPH, UC Davis Health

Join Dr. Angel Desai for a discussion on emerging and re-emerging vector-borne disease epidemiology. Explore data on the association of climate change and extreme weather events, the shifting epidemiology of vector-borne disease, and discuss resources clinicians need to be prepared. 

Examining the Relationship Between Valley Fever and Climate in California with Simon Camponuri, MPH, UC Berkeley PhD Candidate

Valley fever is an emerging fungal infection in the U.S., and until recently, our understanding of how climate influences the patterns and distribution of Valley fever has been limited. Join Simon Camponuri to discuss recent advances in the study of Valley fever's environmental epidemiology, including the role of drought in magnifying Valley fever incidence, the relationship between regional climate and the spatial distribution of the disease, and how climate change may shape the future distribution of Valley fever in the United States. 

Valley Fever Among Workers Constructing Solar Power Farms in California with Gail Sondermeyer Cooksey, MPH, CDPH

In this case-based presentation, Gail Sondermeyer Cooksey will discuss outbreaks of coccidioidomycosis (Valley fever) that occurred among construction workers on solar power farms in California, including a description of the occupational risk of Valley fever, disease impacts and outcomes, and recommended risk reduction measures. Learners will also explore the challenges of outbreak detection and prevention, and the potential impact of changing climate on occupational Valley fever. 

Joint Q&A on Emerging Biological Hazards with Angel N. Desai, MD, MPH; Simon Camponuri, MPH; and Gail Sondermeyer Cooksey, MPH, CDPH

Wildfire Smoke & Debris: Protecting Workers from Chemical Exposures

Exposure of Agricultural Workers in California to Wildfire Smoke Under Past and Future Climate Conditions with Miriam Marlier, PhD, UC Los Angeles 

Due to the outdoor and physically demanding nature of their work, agricultural workers are particularly vulnerable to wildfire smoke pollution. Join Dr. Miriam Marlier to quantify the exposure of California agricultural workers to past and future wildfire smoke PM2.5. Discuss the increase in 'smokewave' exposure under future climate conditions, and the CA counties projected to be most impacted. Consider the role of air quality monitoring networks, and policies needed to better protect outdoor agricultural workers. 

Protecting Workers Performing Fire Debris Removal: Medical Surveillance Recommendations with Sheri Belafsky, MD, MS, UC Davis Health and John Balmes, MD, UC San Francisco

California workers tasked with removing debris resulting from wildland and wildland urban interface fires face potential exposures to airborne and soil-based contaminants including known carcinogens and respiratory hazards. In this emerging field of occupational health, specific medical surveillance guidance for these workers has not been previously identified. Occupational health providers will need resources to guide their screening recommendations for these workers. 

Health and Wellbeing for Federal Wildland Firefighters with Kathleen Navarro DuBose, MPH, PhD, U.S Department of the Interior

Discuss hazards in the wildland fire environment, recent congressional direction to address wildland firefighter health and wellbeing, current efforts under development, and the difficulties of working and conducting research in an incredibly dynamic environment. 

Joint Q&A on Wildfire Smoke & Debris with Miriam Marlier, PhD; Sheri Belafsky, MD; John Balmes, MD; and Kathleen Navarro DuBose, MPH, PhD

Heat Illness: Addressing Physical Exposures

How to Prevent Heat Illness in California: Assessing the CA Heat Illness Prevention Standard & CA Indoor Heat Proposal with Amy Heinzerling, MD, MS, California Department of Public Health, and David Hornung, MPH, CIH, Cal/OSHA

Join David Hornung and Dr. Amy Heinzerling to discuss existing and potential regulations in California to prevent heat illness, including lessons learned from recent heat fatalities. Review rates of heat illness observed in California workers over time, and leverage worker's compensation data to highlight demographic and occupational risk factors for heat illness. 

Improved Methods to Measure Extreme Heat Exposure and Response with Konrad Rykaczewski, PhD, Arizona State University

Discuss new biometerological methods being developed at Arizona State University (ASU) to assess how humans are impacted by extremely hot environments. Learn about ANDI, an indoor-outdoor breathing, sweating, and walking thermal manikin leveraged to better understand and measure the effects of extreme heat on human health. 

Using the Heat-Related Illness Screening Tool (HIST) with Jean M. Bernhardt, PhD, MSN, MSHA, NHA, NEA-BC, CNP, Mass General Brigham

Extreme heat is a major health risk associated with climate change. Heat-related illness (HRI) resulting from exposure to excess heat presents a complex intersection of physical, environmental, and social processes. The heat-related illness screening tool (HIST) identifies individuals at risk for HRI. Early screening with the easily admissible HIST can prevent or mitigate the progressive negative effects of heat intolerance. 

Joint Q&A with Amy Heinzerling, MD, MS; David Hornung, MPH, CIH; Jean M. Bernhardt, PhD, MSN, MSHA, NHA, NEA-BC, CNP; Konrad Rykaczewski, PhD; and Nayamin Martinez, MPH; Central California Environmental Justice Network

Course Format & Cancellation Policies

Registration Fee: $75.00

This course is a recorded, on-demand course offering, made available online through Canvas Instructure. Once purchased, you will have access to the course for 365 days. This course will expire on February 28, 2027, regardless of purchase date. All sales of on-demand online classes are final. No refunds will be made for cancellations. 

Sponsors

This event is produced in partnership with the Center for Occupational and Environmental Health at UC Berkeley, and the Center for Occupational and Environmental Heatlh at UC Davis.

Accessibility:

If you require an accommodation for effective communication (ASL interpreting/CART captioning, alternative media formats, etc.) to fully participate in this event, please contact Michelle Meyer at (510) 642-8365 or mmeyer@berkeley.edu

Center for Occupational and Environmental Health
UC Davis Health School of Medicine

Accreditation:

This course is offered on a pass / fail basis for continuing education credit. Learners must complete all of the course videos, and receive a 70% or higher on the post-course quiz, to pass the course and obtain a Certificate of Completion. 

The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health designates this activity for a maximum of 5.0 Contact Hours. Participants should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation.

Nurses:

Provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number 12983, for 5.0 contact hours.

Physicians:

This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the California Medical Association (CMA) through the joint providership of The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health UC Berkeley, and The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health UC Davis. The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health UC Berkeley is accredited by the CMA to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health designates this live activity for a maximum of 5.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Board for Global EHS Credentialing

Certified Industrial Hygienists (CIH) may be eligible to earn up to 5.0 contact hours for this event. Visit https://gobgc.org/applicants_CIH/ for more information.

Safety Professionals:

Certified Safety Professionals may be eligible to earn up to 5.0 contact hours for this event. Visit https://online.fliphtml5.com/pbcyp/eprz/#p=19 for more information. 

Registered Environmental Health Specialists:

This course has been approved for 5.0 contact hours, REHS. The Center for Occupational and Environmental Health (COEH) UC Berkeley is a Registered Environmental Health Specialist (REHS) Program Continuing Education Accreditation Agency approved by the California Department of Public Health. 

Disclosure:

No individuals involved in the planning or presentation of this activity have any relevant financial relationships with commercial interests to disclose. There were no relevant financial relationships to be mitigated.

Released: March 2024

Expires: February 2027