Why children need an earlier response
Children’s lungs and immune systems are developing. They breathe more air relative to body size and often spend more time running and playing outdoors. Children with asthma or chronic conditions may have symptoms at lower pollution levels.
Prepare before smoke season
- Ask the child’s healthcare professional for an asthma or respiratory action plan.
- Keep rescue medicine, spacers, controller medicine, and school authorization forms current.
- Prepare a 7- to 10-day medication supply when possible.
- Identify a clean-air room and test filtration.
- Learn school closure, activity, and reunification procedures.
During smoky conditions
Check AQI and follow guidance for sensitive groups. Move play indoors and reduce strenuous activity. Keep windows and doors closed and use filtration. Avoid frying, grilling, candles, incense, smoking, and other indoor particle sources.
Respirators and children
CDC says children age 2 and older can wear masks or respirators, but NIOSH-approved respirators are generally designed for adult workplaces and may not fit children. A poor fit lowers protection. Choose a size that covers the nose and chin without blocking vision and that the child can keep on correctly.
Do not place a mask on a child under age 2. Do not force a respirator on a child who cannot breathe comfortably, communicate distress, or remove it independently. Cleaner indoor air is more reliable than depending on a mask for long periods.
Asthma and chronic conditions
Follow the written action plan. Keep medicine accessible during sleep, school, travel, and evacuation. Do not increase, decrease, or substitute medicine unless the plan or clinician directs it.
When to consider leaving
If a child continues to cough, wheeze, or struggle in the home despite filtration, seek a cleaner location and contact the clinician. CDC advises considering evacuation when breathing trouble or other symptoms do not improve. Extreme heat or power loss may also make relocation necessary.
After the fire
Children should not clean ash or debris. Keep them away until hazardous material is removed and local authorities say the area is safe. Wash ash from skin and rinse eyes with clean water if exposed. Continue checking AQI because smoke can return.
Emotional support
Children may experience fear, sleep changes, irritability, grief, or repeated questions. Maintain predictable meals and bedtime, limit alarming media, explain the plan in simple language, and let children help with safe tasks such as choosing books for the clean-air room.
Emergency signs
Get medical help for breathing difficulty, persistent cough, worsening wheeze, severe tiredness, or refusal to eat or drink. Call 911 for severe trouble breathing, blue or gray lips, fainting, confusion, or inability to wake normally.
School plans
Provide the school with current medication authorization and an action plan before fire season. Ask how outdoor activity is changed during poor AQI.