Study Examines Smoke-Free Cities
Cities with indoor smoking bans have
dramatically lower indoor air pollution than cities that allow
patrons to light up in bars and restaurants, according to a study
released.
Researchers at the Roswell Park
Cancer Institute in Buffalo conducted air quality tests in 53
venues in seven major U.S. cities, and found that indoor air pollution
was an average of 82 percent lower in smoke-free cities.
The results appear in line with
several smaller studies that showed a decrease in air pollution
in cities that prohibit indoor smoking.
"If anything is surprising, it's
the magnitude of the effect," said Andrew Hyland, who led the
study. "We're not talking about a 10 percent reduction in exposure."
The latest study was partly financed
by grants from the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, an anti-smoking
group.
Of the seven cities studied, those
that enforced a smoking ban New York City, Buffalo and
Los Angeles had lower levels of indoor air pollution than
cities that permitted smoking, including Washington, D.C., Baltimore,
Philadelphia and Hoboken, N.J., the study found.
New York City had the lowest concentration
of indoor pollutants of all the cities at 25 micrograms per cubic
meter of air. Buffalo was second followed by Los Angeles. Compliance
of the smoking ban was observed in all smoke-free venues except
for three places in Los Angeles where smoking was observed, the
study found.
Washington, D.C. had the highest
levels of indoor air pollution at 392 micrograms per cubic meter
of air followed by Baltimore, Philadelphia and Hoboken. The differences
can be attributed to the number of smokers at a given time and
how well the ventilation system displaces the air, Hyland said.
The next step is to determine how
increased secondhand smoke affects the overall health of bar and
restaurant workers, Hyland said. Last year, researchers in Montana
reported that heart attacks in Helena had dropped sharply during
the first two months its smoking ban was in effect.
Some bars and restaurants owners
in New York have been critical of the statewide smoking ban that
went into effect last summer. The New York State Health Department
and local health departments have since granted waivers to establishments
that can prove they suffered financial hardship under the ban.
_____
On the Net:
Roswell Park : http://www.roswellpark.org
Reference
Source 102
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|