|
Lighting Up Linked to Bad Grades
Smoking and asthma and poor grades seem
to go hand in hand.
An American study found inner-city
students in schools with the poorest academic ratings have a much
higher rate of tobacco exposure and experimentation than students
at other schools.
The study by researchers at Jefferson
Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia
also found children with asthma were more likely to experiment
with tobacco and to be exposed to tobacco smoke than children
without asthma.
"Tobacco use and asthma are
more prevalent among poor and minority populations, most often
found in inner-city areas," lead researcher Dr. Salvatore
Mangione, an associate professor of medicine, says in a prepared
statement.
"If a child grows up in a
household with smokers, that child is much more likely to experiment
with tobacco. Tobacco exposure, whether active or passive, is
a major trigger for asthma, and asthma is a known cause of absenteeism
in children, which can, in turn, lead to worse academic performance,"
Mangione says.
The study included 6,727 middle
school students in 65 Philadelphia public schools. Of those students,
about 6,000 attended schools managed by the Philadelphia School
District (PSD), while 721 students attended the lowest academic
performing schools, managed by a private organization called Edison
Inc.
Overall, 23.7 percent of PSD children
and 24.5 percent of Edison children reported having asthma. Among
those children with asthma, home exposure to environmental smoke
was reported by 73.2 percent of the Edison children and by 64.5
percent of the PSD children.
Experimentation with smoking was
reported by 31 percent of the Edison children and by 24.1 percent
of the PSD children.
In both school districts, more
children with asthma experimented with smoking than those without
asthma. In PSD children, 24.1 percent of asthmatics and 20.5 percent
of non-asthmatics reported tobacco experimentation. In Edison
children, those figures were 31 percent and 23.2 percent, respectively.
The study was presented Oct. 29
at the annual scientific meeting of the American College of Chest
Physicians in Orlando, Fla.
"Many parents and family members
who smoke do not realize how tobacco exposure can impact a child's
respiratory health," Mangione says.
"School-based programs are
needed to educate parents and children on the dangers of tobacco
exposure and experimentation and their adverse effects on asthma
and other respiratory conditions," he says.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about young
people and tobacco.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|