California Fire Relief

Disaster Relief

Helping People Affected by the fires in Los Angeles

To support recovery efforts in LA following the devastating fires, Direct Relief is supplying clinics and mobile teams with critical medical resources, providing long-term financial support for healthcare and mental health services, and strengthening community resilience through targeted interventions.


100% of donations to Direct Relief’s wildfire response fund directly support efforts to assist individuals impacted by fires in Palisades, Altadena, and across California, providing critical aid where it’s needed most.

California Fire Relief Efforts

Direct Relief Announces $2.7 Million to Expand Healthcare Access to L.A. Residents

Initiative to enhance healthcare access and bolster recovery efforts for Los Angeles communities.

Response to L.A. Wildfires Continues, Three Months In

Direct Relief has provided more than $2.8 million worth of medical support to L.A.-area organizations and more than $ 5.3 million in cash aid.

Direct Relief Announces $500,000 in Rental Assistance for Families Displaced by L.A. Wildfires

The Change Reaction will use the funding to provide rental assistance to families.

As a California-based disaster relief and medical assistance organization, Direct Relief has responded to wildfires in California and throughout the U.S. for decades, and is currently supporting recovery efforts in Los Angeles following devastating fires.

In response to the L.A. fires, Direct Relief provided more than $8 million in financial and material aid in the three months following the fires, including

  • 422 shipments totaling more than 54 tons of essential medications and medical supplies delivered to 77 local health and community organizations.
  • More than 130,000 3M-donated N95 respirators distributed in collaboration with public health departments, incident command centers, Gap Inc., the YMCA, and numerous health centers and clinics across L.A.
  • Nearly 16,000 burn zone re-entry kits distributed through the L.A. Fire Department, L.A. County Department of Public Health, the City of Pasadena, and the National Day Laborer Organizing Network.
  • $5.3 million in emergency operating grants awarded to 56 community-based organizations, including health clinics, mobile medical units, women’s health groups, and search-and-rescue teams.

Looking Ahead: Commitment to Long-Term Recovery

Los Angeles communities face a prolonged recovery. The extensive destruction will significantly impact physical and mental health for years, exacerbating chronic diseases, mental health issues, and disproportionately affecting vulnerable populations.

Direct Relief remains committed to sustained support, including:

  • Continued medical supply deliveries to clinics and mobile teams.
  • Long-term financial support for healthcare and mental health services.
  • Community resilience initiatives through preparedness and targeted interventions.

Fires and Health Impacts

CAL FIRE helicopter responding to fires burning near Malibu. (Photo by Satsuki Mitchell)

Wildfires represent an increasingly serious threat to the health and well-being of communities. As climate change and urban expansion contribute to the growing frequency, duration, and severity of wildfires, communities are increasingly impacted by the health risks associated with smoke inhalation, contaminated water supplies, disrupted access to essential services, and physical displacement.

Exposure to wildfire emissions can cause acute physical irritations and exacerbate symptoms of respiratory and cardiovascular conditions, such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and heart disease. Some populations, such as children, pregnant women, older adults, and those with chronic health conditions, experience greater risks of adverse health outcomes from wildfires and may be especially impacted by limited or disrupted access to health services and essential medicines.

Wildfires can also take a significant toll on mental health, with exposure to smoke, evacuations, and the loss of homes and livelihoods inflicting major disruptions to people’s lives and contributing to increased stress, anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress.

Further, wildfires often cause power outages, disrupting access to critical health services and putting those reliant on electrically powered medical devices and medicines requiring refrigeration at heightened risk while increased patient volumes during and after wildfires can strain local health care systems.

The impact of these power outages and the pressure on local health resources often exacerbate health inequities, particularly among communities that experience chronic shortages of primary care.

Fire-Induced Power Blackouts

Direct Relief's delivers a generator and battery to the Free Clinic of Simi Valley. The unit provided the clinic with emergency backup power during the Saddleridge Fire in Oct., 2019.
Direct Relief delivers a generator and battery to the Free Clinic of Simi Valley. The unit provided the clinic with emergency backup power during the Saddleridge Fire.

California’s utility companies plan to continue intentional power shutdowns during periods of extreme fire danger while they address a maintenance backlog that could take a decade to resolve. Meanwhile, climate change is making California’s autumns hotter, drier and longer.

For a health center treating underserved patients on a shoestring margin, a power outage is serious. It means that patients go without visits or access to medication for days on end.

Nearly two in five health centers (39%) responding to a Direct Relief survey said they had lost power during the grid shut-offs, and 29% were forced to close during the outages

Losing access to power is expected to become a recurring challenge for health centers.

In response to power outages, Direct Relief provides a range of resilient power solutions, from backup power units and generators for shelters to large-scale solar and battery installation projects at health centers across the state.

Active California Fire Tracker

Direct Relief maps the real-time detection of new fires and tracks changes in the intensity and perimeter fire burn areas. The fire map below shows the boundaries surrounding an active fire, while the dashboard records how many acres have burned to date in California, as well as a tally of active fires burning in the state.