As the autumn and winter seasons approach, new data from the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) show a clear and troubling trend: when air quality worsens, Oregon’s emergency rooms (ERs) and urgent care clinics are seeing significant increases in visits for breathing problems, mental health symptoms, and other pollution-related health issues.
Poor Air Quality and Rising Health Visits
OHA’s recently updated “Air Quality & Health Outcomes” dashboard tracks near-real-time health trends including ER and urgent care visits alongside daily air quality measures. Analysis reveals the following key increases:
- During the 2020 wildfire events, the statewide increase in visits for asthma-like illnesses jumped by about 25% compared to the preceding four-week period.
- In the Portland tri-county region in 2022, respiratory issue visits were up: 44% in Washington County, 35% in Clackamas County, and 7% in Multnomah County versus the 2016-2019 average.
- Among Hispanic and Latino Oregonians during major smoke episodes: roughly a 30% increase in asthma-related visits compared to ~22% among other populations.
- On days of poor air quality, the number of visits tied to anxiety, stress, and other mental-health symptoms also rose statewide.
This data suggests that the impact of poor air quality goes beyond lungs and leaves — it reaches mental health and community well-being too.
What the Data Shows at a Glance
Here’s a table summarising some of the standout figures from the OHA dataset:
| Measure | Change Observed | Notes / Region |
|---|---|---|
| Asthma-like illness visits during 2020 wildfires | ~ +25% | Statewide increase during major air event |
| Increase in respiratory visits — Washington County (2022) | +44% | Portland tri-county area |
| Increase in respiratory visits — Clackamas County (2022) | +35% | Portland tri-county area |
| Increase in respiratory visits — Multnomah County (2022) | +7% | Same region |
| Increase among Hispanic/Latino population during smoke events | ~ +30% | Disparity vs ~22% for other populations |
| Mental-health / stress-related visits on poor air days | Data show meaningful rise | Statewide, across multiple categories |
Why This Matters
These trends are significant for several reasons:
- Ambient air-pollution events — such as wildfire smoke or inversion-layer episodes — are becoming more frequent and intense in Oregon, raising the risk of respiratory and mental-health burdens.
- Hospitals and clinics may face surges in patient volume on days with degraded air quality, making preparedness essential.
- Disparities in the impact (e.g., higher increases in Hispanic/Latino communities) underscore equity concerns — some populations bear a heavier health burden.
- The link between environmental conditions and mental-health outcomes is often overlooked, yet the data show clear associations.
Given that the dashboard data are updated weekly and cover both air-quality indicators (like daily maximum PM2.5 levels) and health outcomes (ER and urgent care visits), public-health officials now have more timely insight to respond.
What Public Health Officials Are Doing
OHA and local health departments are using the data to:
- Forecast resource surges ahead of known air-pollution or wildfire-smoke events.
- Issue targeted public-health alerts to communities most at risk (including those with pre-existing conditions or located in smoke-prone regions).
- Integrate air-quality monitoring with climate-resilience planning, so that hospitals, clinics and local agencies can align readiness with environmental threats.
- Expand the monitoring system to include new health-measures (e.g., hospitalisations) and additional pollutant analyses.
What Residents Should Know
If you live in Oregon — especially in areas prone to wildfires or air-quality lapses — it’s wise to:
- Monitor air-quality alerts and stay indoors on days rated “unhealthy” or worse.
- Be aware of existing lung conditions (such as asthma, COPD) and mental-health triggers (stress, anxiety) that may respond to poor air quality.
- Ensure that your urgent-care or ER access is understood, and consider contacting your provider when symptoms spike.
- Pay attention to local health-department guidance — many issue warnings and specific tips when air quality deteriorates.
The new health-data dashboard from Oregon’s health agencies provides compelling evidence: as air quality worsens, more Oregonians are heading into emergency rooms and urgent care clinics — not only for respiratory issues but also for mental-health related symptoms.
With notable surges in specific counties and among certain populations, the implications are wide-ranging. It’s a stark reminder that environmental health and public health are deeply intertwined.
Preparedness, equity-focused outreach and individual awareness will all play a role in managing the next poor-air-quality event.



