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Colorado Sees Asthma Surge from Rocky Mountain Wildfire Smoke

National Desk
May 3, 2026
DENVER — The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) has issued urgent warnings about a sharp increase in asthma cases tied to smoke from ongoing wildfires scorching the Rocky Mountains, echoing patterns seen in the devastating 2012 fire season. During that year, studies on the Front Range documented elevated odds of asthma hospitalizations, with a 7% increase per 10 µg/m³ rise in wildfire smoke PM2.5 for all ages, particularly from long-range smoke events.[1] Current air quality monitors show similar spikes in fine particulate matter, prompting CDPHE to advise staying indoors as smoke drifts into Denver, Colorado Springs and Fort Collins.[4] Pulmonologists at National Jewish Health in Denver, including Dr. David Beuther, explain that wildfire smoke's tiny PM2.5 particles burrow deep into lungs, triggering widespread inflammation that worsens asthma, COPD and even heart issues. "It gets deep into the lungs and causes inflammation throughout the body," Beuther said, recommending HEPA furnace filters and sealed homes for protection.[4] UCHealth's Dr. Fernando Holguin, a pulmonary expert at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, notes smokers and those with preexisting conditions face amplified risks, with symptoms like wheezing, chest tightness and rapid heartbeats surging.[5] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists immediate effects including coughing, trouble breathing, stinging eyes and fatigue, hitting children, elders and asthmatics hardest.[3] In 2012, long-range smoke from Pacific Northwest fires showed positive associations with asthma odds (OR: 1.455), unlike some local fire data, highlighting smoke transport's role across Colorado's urban corridors.[1] CDPHE reports frontline clinics seeing 20-30% more respiratory visits this week, centered on wildfire hotspots near Grand Junction and the Sangre de Cristo range. Health leaders stress masking outdoors, monitoring AirNow.gov and avoiding exertion until smoke clears, as climate-driven fires intensify these threats for Colorado's 5.8 million residents.[2]

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