Over 120 million Americans are under air quality alerts as smoke and hazy skies from Canada's wildfi

Dangerous air quality and hazy skies persist as smoke from Canada’s raging wildfires drifts south, leaving more than 120 million people under air quality alerts across a dozen states from Minnesota to New York and down to the Carolinas.

Chicago had the worst air quality of major cities in the world as of Thursday morning, according to IQAir, while Detroit, Washington, DC, and Minneapolis all ranked among the top 10 most polluted cities.

In Canada – which is seeing its worst fire season on record – authorities have also issued air quality alerts across several provinces.

Smoke from Canada's record-breaking fire season has crossed the northern Atlantic and is now impacting portions of western Europe, according to the UK Met Office. NASA MODIS

“With no end in sight to the Canadian wildfires and west to northwesterly winds expected to persist from south central Canada into the north central to northeast U.S., poor air quality conditions are likely to continue,” the National Weather Service warned.

A Code Red alert – warning of unhealthy air quality – was issued for much of the Midwest and Ohio Valley on Wednesday, according to AirNow.gov. Other affected American cities were mostly under “Code Orange” – with the air deemed unhealthy for sensitive groups.

Several cities across Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Iowa were experiencing “very unhealthy” air that poses health risks for everyone – not just sensitive groups, according to AirNow.gov.

Smoke was so thick, it reduced visibility for up to three miles in some areas across the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley.

On Thursday, those areas are expected to experience the worst air quality in the country – with the highest risk of reaching “Unhealthy” and “Very Unhealthy” levels – early in the day before the smoke begins to slowly disperse.

Farther east, including in New York, residents will likely be under an Code Orange, or “Unhealthy for sensitive groups,” air quality warning.

Residents are being advised to stay indoors with their air conditioning running, avoid going outside, and in some areas, wear N95 masks if they have to be outside. The masks were being distributed at transit hubs and parks in New York and Gov. Kathy Hochul expanded an air quality health advisory to include the entire state on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, from Minnesota to Pennsylvania, events are being canceled due to the wildfire smoke.

Photos from across the country captured the eerie hazy or orange skies over iconic American skylines, with smoke lingering over freeways and neighborhoods.

Wildfire smoke carries particulate matter, or PM2.5 – a tiny but dangerous pollutant that, when inhaled, can travel deep into lung tissue and enter the bloodstream, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The particulate matter has been linked to a number of health problems including asthma, heart disease and other respiratory illnesses.

People with heart or breathing problems, children and older people may be particularly sensitive to PM2.5.

Exposure can cause short-term health effects like irritation to the eyes, nose, and throat, coughing, sneezing, runny nose, and shortness of breath. Exposure to high levels of fine particulate matter can also worsen medical conditions such as asthma and heart disease, New York health officials said.

How to limit exposure

A hazy sky hangs over Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday. Quinn Glabicki/Reuters

As smoke inundate cities, health departments across the country have been advising residents to limit their exposure to the pollutants. Many are calling for people to stay indoors and avoid activities that make them breathe faster or more deeply.

“The recommendation is to close your windows, turn on the air conditioners, turn on air filters,” Dr. Aida Capo, a pulmonologist with Hackensack Meridian Palisades Medical Center in New Jersey, told CNN.

Ricardo Arduengo/AFP/Getty Images

Since particles can creep into homes, AirNow recommends those in areas with high levels of particle pollution consider purchasing an air cleaner.

For those who have to be outside, disposable respirators like N-95s or P-100s will help if worn correctly, AirNow says. Meanwhile, surgical masks, paper dust masks, scarves and bandanas won’t protect the lungs from PM2.5.

Residents in affected areas are also advised to reduce strenuous physical activity.

“If you have to walk, walk, but I wouldn’t go for a run or a jog,” said Dr. Shilpa Patel, medical director of Children’s National IMPACT DC Asthma Clinic in Washington.

“Just be prudent about your decision to be outside,” she added. “And keep in mind, even if you go outside and it doesn’t bother you, it could affect you later. Because these are small particulates, so they go deep into your airways, and the response could be a little bit delayed.”

CNN Meteorologist Taylor Ward and CNN’s Dave Alsup and Joe Sutton contributed to this report.

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