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International Study Confirms
Passive Smoke's Harm
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Exposure
to passive, or secondhand, tobacco smoke increases a person's
risk for experiencing a variety of respiratory ailments, according
to the results of a large international study.
What's more, exposure to secondhand smoke varies widely around
the world.
For example, people exposed to secondhand smoke in the workplace
varied from less than 3% of those in Uppsala, Sweden, to 54% of
the participants living in Galdakao, Spain, the report indicates.
Overall, exposure to secondhand smoke in the workplace nearly
doubled a person's risk of respiratory ailments and ``was significantly
associated with all types of respiratory symptoms and current
asthma,'' the authors write.
Passive smoking, in general, was associated with nighttime chest
tightness, nighttime breathlessness, and breathlessness after
activity.
``Decreasing involuntary exposure to tobacco smoke in the community,
especially in workplaces, is likely to improve respiratory health,''
conclude Dr. Christer Janson of Uppsala University in Sweden and
colleagues. The study, which included interviews and lung tests
of nearly 8,000 nonsmokers from 16 different countries, is published
in the December 22/29 issue of the journal The Lancet. The study
included 13 European countries, Australia, New Zealand and the
US.
In the US, smoke-free businesses are on the rise with 69% of
employees reporting that they work in buildings where smoking
has been prohibited by employers or government regulations, according
to a recent study sponsored by the National Cancer Institute.
By comparison, fewer than half of all employees surveyed in 1993--46%--worked
in smoke-free environments.
The US Surgeon General first warned of the dangers of ''secondhand
smoke'' in 1986, citing that exposure to tobacco smoke increased
the incidence of lung cancer, heart and lung disease among nonsmokers.
SOURCE: The Lancet 2001;358:2103-2109.
Reference
Source 89
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