PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Helping more people get to safety in a wildfire

Scientists have developed a web-based tool to help communities design an optimal wildfire evacuation plan

2023-12-13
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, DC, Dec. 13, 2023 – Wildfires pose an increasing threat to communities at the wildland-urban interface (WUI) – where dry, flammable vegetation borders back yards, often in remote locations. Despite the well-known danger, many communities at highest risk do not have a strong wildfire evacuation plan in place. (One of these was the town of Lahaina on Maui, where wind-driven wildfires killed nearly 100 people in August 2023.) 

Researchers from UCLA’s John Garrick Institute for the Risk Sciences have built a new web-based software platform that allows emergency planners to design custom-made evacuation plans for their communities that will help more people safely escape an oncoming wildfire. The results of a first test of the tool, using the deadly 2018 Camp Fire in California as an example, will be presented by Mohammad Pishahang at the annual meeting of the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA), Dec. 11-13 in Washington, D.C. 

 

The Wildfire Safe Egress planning (WISE) simulation platform is a visual, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) environment that allows users to simulate several wildfire scenarios on a map and calculate the likelihood of the safe evacuation of a population. It incorporates data on the demographics and road network of a community and allows users to input specific factors such as fire dynamics, community boundaries, warning system parameters, and shelter locations. It is the first wildfire evacuation planning tool to also include several factors affecting human behavior in emergency situations such as age, income level, English proficiency, disabilities, and vehicle ownership (all of which impact a household’s decision to evacuate).  

The Deadly Camp Fire of 2018 

To demonstrate WiSE and its capabilities, Pishahang and his colleagues recently simulated an evacuation of the entire city of Paradise during California’s deadliest wildfire: the Camp Fire of 2018, which killed 85 people.  

 

For the simulation, they set the “awareness trigger time” (one of the data inputs) to just one hour before the fire entered the city, and they assumed that the warning system completely failed. “This is consistent with the real-life events in which the official evacuation warnings failed to reach the population successfully,” says Pishahang.  

 

In this simulation, the researchers found that only 16 percent of the at-risk community population had the opportunity to safely exit the danger zone. Consequently, 84 percent of the population evacuated while already facing the fire and being surrounded by it (not considered to be a safe evacuation).  These results were qualitatively validated by the firefighters who served in the Camp Fire disaster. 

When they shortened the pre-evacuation time (i.e. indicating faster decision-making and action by the at-risk people) and accounted for a better (working) warning system in a second simulation, they discovered that: 

if the community had 2 hours to exit the area in the same situation, more than 40 percent of the population could have left the danger zone before the fire reached the borders of the city; and 

if only 20 percent of the at-risk people had been made aware of the need to evacuate by an official warning system one hour before the fire reached the city borders, still more than 44 percent of the residents would have had the opportunity to safely exit the danger zone. 

“These findings demonstrate how WiSE can help emergency managers design the best possible evacuation plan and indicate the best evacuation preparation strategies for their community that are based on data and maximize the number of people who can safely escape an oncoming wildfire,” says Pishahang. 

For each wildfire scenario, the program identifies main bottlenecks and traffic congestion points so planners can address these issues before a natural disaster occurs. 

 

“Many existing WUI communities do not sufficiently meet evacuation-related travel needs, including suburbs built with only one road in and out,” says Pishahang. “WiSE can help planners see how to decrease a community’s vulnerability by increasing roads traffic capacity in addition to improving the reliability of communication and warning systems and educating residents on how to follow evacuation orders in event of an emergency.”  

### 

Presentations are located at The Westin Washington, D.C. 

WiSE: Wildfire Safe Evacuation Planning and Management – Wednesday, December 13, 8:30-8:50 a.m. 

About SRA
The Society for Risk Analysis is a multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, scholarly, international society that provides an open forum for all those interested in risk analysis. SRA was established in 1980. Since 1982, it has continuously published Risk Analysis: An International Journal, the leading scholarly journal in the field. For more information, visit www.sra.org.   

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Review in Chinese Medical Journal highlights the challenges and recent advances in targeted therapies for lupus nephritis

Review in Chinese Medical Journal highlights the challenges and recent advances in targeted therapies for lupus nephritis
2023-12-13
Patients with lupus nephritis (LN), a severe complication of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), often undergo progressive kidney damage, with approximately 20% of these patients advancing to end-stage renal disease. The current therapeutic landscape for LN, dominated by glucocorticoids and immunosuppressants, is limited by suboptimal response rates, the risk of disease flare-ups and adverse effects, accentuating the necessity for safer and more effective treatment modalities. In the latest issue of the Chinese Medical Journal (CMJ) published online on December 15, 2023, a review authored by Dr. Wei Chen from the Department of Nephrology of the First Affiliated ...

Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy (PICI) welcomes Weill Cornell Medicine to cancer research consortium

2023-12-13
San Francisco and New York — Dec. 13, 2023 — The Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy (PICI), the largest concentration of immuno-oncology (IO) expertise in the world, announced it has added Weill Cornell Medicine to its network of preeminent academic and medical research institutions at the forefront of the fight against cancer. Under the agreement, Weill Cornell Medicine, with new PICI Network researchers, will establish a PICI immuno-oncology research center in New York City.     Since its inception, PICI has distributed $260 million to member researchers to support ...

Saving endangered species: New AI method counts manatee clusters in real time

Saving endangered species: New AI method counts manatee clusters in real time
2023-12-13
Manatees are endangered species volatile to the environment.  Because of their voracious appetites, they often spend up to eight hours a day grazing for food within shallow waters, making them vulnerable to environmental changes and other risks. Accurately counting manatee aggregations within a region is not only biologically meaningful in observing their habit, but also crucial for designing safety rules for boaters and divers as well as scheduling nursing, intervention, and other plans. Nevertheless, counting manatees ...

National cardiogenic shock initiative study results show significant increase in heart attack survival

National cardiogenic shock initiative study results show significant increase in heart attack survival
2023-12-13
DETROIT (December 13, 2023) – Published results of a large, national heart attack study show that patients with a life-threatening complication known as cardiogenic shock survived at a significantly higher rate when treated with a protocol developed by cardiologists at Henry Ford Health, in collaboration with 80 hospitals nationwide. Cardiogenic shock is a critical condition in which the heart is unable to pump enough blood to sustain the body’s needs, depriving vital organs of blood supply. This can cause those organs to eventually stop functioning. The typical survival rate of this deadly complication during a heart ...

Time to abandon null hypothesis significance testing? Moving beyond the default approach to statistical analysis and reporting

2023-12-13
Researchers from Northwestern University, University of Pennsylvania, and University of Colorado published a new Journal of Marketing study that proposes abandoning null hypothesis significance testing (NHST) as the default approach to statistical analysis and reporting. The study, forthcoming in the Journal of Marketing, is titled “‘Statistical Significance’ and Statistical Reporting: Moving Beyond Binary” and is authored by Blakeley B. McShane, ...

Extracting uranium from seawater as another source of nuclear fuel

Extracting uranium from seawater as another source of nuclear fuel
2023-12-13
Oceans cover most of Earth’s surface and support a staggering number of lifeforms, but they’re also home to a dilute population of uranium ions. And — if we can get these particular ions out of the water — they could be a sustainable fuel source to generate nuclear power. Researchers publishing in ACS Central Science have now developed a material to use with electrochemical extraction that attracts hard-to-get uranium ions from seawater more efficiently than existing methods. Nuclear power reactors release ...

Medicare doesn’t cover obesity drugs, but 76% of older adults think it should

2023-12-13
The vast majority of older adults – 83% -- think health insurers should cover medications that can help people with obesity manage their weight, a new poll of people age 50 to 80 finds. Nearly as many -- 76% -- believe Medicare should cover these drugs, which it cannot currently do under law, according to the new results from the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging. A law passed in 2003 prohibits Medicare from covering weight loss medications, though it can cover drugs to help people with Type 2 diabetes manage their weight. Medicaid covers obesity medications ...

TTUHSC researcher to study new pathway to inhibit protein found in many cancers

TTUHSC researcher to study new pathway to inhibit protein found in many cancers
2023-12-13
With an estimated 1.9 million new cases and more than 600,000 deaths each year, cancer remains the second most common cause of death in the U.S., trailing only heart disease. And while there are more than 200 types of cancer, the abnormal synthesis of a protein known as STAT3 is unique to the majority of tumors. STAT3 is known as a transcriptional regulator, which means it regulates the expression of several genes. In fact, STAT3 is associated with approximately 70% of all human tumors and is responsible for uncontrolled cell growth and disease progression. To investigate new approaches to inhibit STAT3 and develop new cancer treatments, the National Institutes of Health-National ...

The shape of dogs' heads affects their sleep

The shape of dogs heads affects their sleep
2023-12-13
Flat-faced dog breeds are popular all over the world. In the USA and in Hungary, the French Bulldog is currently the most common breed. However, their popularity comes at a high cost in terms of health: shortened skulls are associated with deteriorative brain morphology changes, breathing difficulties and sleep problems. According to recent findings by Hungarian researchers, flat-faced dogs sleep more because their breed-specific sleep apnea increases daytime sleepiness, their REM sleep phase is longer than ...

UTSA names Department of Defense leader David Brown as NSCC Executive Director

UTSA names Department of Defense leader David Brown as NSCC Executive Director
2023-12-13
The University of Texas at San Antonio today announced the selection of David Brown as the new executive director of its National Security Collaboration Center (NSCC) and professor of practice. Brown will join UTSA with decades of experience leading collaborative research and development ecosystems supporting U.S. national defense strategies. Brown is a trusted, well-connected leader in civilian and military communities nationwide who has especially strong relationships within U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) organizations, laboratories and commands and has gained national recognition for his transformative leadership in federal research ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Brazilian study identifies potential targets for treatment of visceral leishmaniasis

Using AI and iNaturalist, scientists build one of the highest resolution maps yet of California plants

Researchers identify signs tied to more severe cases of RSV

Mays Cancer Center radiation oncologist recognized as outstanding mentor to next generation leaders

Hitting the bull’s eye to target ‘undruggable’ diseases – researchers reveal new levels of detail in targeted protein degradation

SCAI publishes expert consensus statement on managing patients with ST-elevated myocardial infarction

Engineering perovskite materials at the atomic level paves way for new lasers, LEDs

Kessler Foundation 2024 Survey highlights key strategies for hiring and supporting workers with disabilities in the hospitality industry

Harnessing protons to treat cancer

Researchers identify neurodevelopmental symptoms that indicate genetic disorders

Electronic nudges to increase influenza vaccination in patients with chronic diseases

Plant stem cells: Better understanding the biological mechanism of growth control

Genomic study identifies human, animal hair in ‘man-eater’ lions’ teeth

These 19th century lions from Kenya ate humans, DNA collected from hairs in their teeth shows

A potential non-invasive stool test and novel therapy for endometriosis

Racial and ethnic disparities in age-specific all-cause mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic

Delft scientists discover how innate immunity envelops bacteria

Workforce diversity is key to advancing One Health

Genome Research publishes a special issue on innovations in computational biology

A quick and easy way to produce anode materials for sodium-ion batteries using microwaves

‘Inside-out’ galaxy growth observed in the early universe

Protein blocking bone development could hold clues for future osteoporosis treatment

A new method makes high-resolution imaging more accessible

Tiny magnetic discs offer remote brain stimulation without transgenes

Illuminating quantum magnets: Light unveils magnetic domains

Different types of teenage friendships critical to wellbeing as we age, scientists find

Hawaii distillery project wins funding from Scottish brewing and distilling award

Trinity researchers find ‘natural killer’ cells that live in the lung are ready for a sugar rush

$7 Million from ARPA-H to tackle lung infections through innovative probiotic treatment

Breakdancers may risk ‘headspin hole’ caused by repetitive headspins, doctors warn

[Press-News.org] Helping more people get to safety in a wildfire
Scientists have developed a web-based tool to help communities design an optimal wildfire evacuation plan