Showing posts with label Smoke-Free in Public. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smoke-Free in Public. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Everybody Deserves Smoke-Free Air

MISSISSIPPI FORUM

By C. David Hill, MD, F.A.A.P.

Everybody deserves smoke-free air. Pediatricians have first-hand experience about what happens when children and babies breathe second-hand smoke.

Smoking is a known cause of preterm birth, low birth-weight and very low birth-weight infants. Exposure to tobacco smoke in the womb causes increased miscarriages and neonatal deaths. And smoking-related health problems result in increased health care costs for all of us.

Mississippi has the nation’s highest prematurity rate and the highest infant mortality rate. Women who work or must do business in buildings where smoking is prevalent suffer an increased risk to their pregnancy even if they do not smoke.

The American Academy of Pediatrics has found that second-hand smoke also contributes to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). Approximately 430 U.S. newborns die each year from smoking related SIDS. In 2009, 38 Mississippi babies died from SIDS. The Mississippi infant death rate is about 130 percent of the national rate. SIDS is the third most common reason for infant deaths in Mississippi and account for 12 percent of all infant deaths in our state.

Second-hand smoke also exacerbates upper and lower respiratory infections, asthma and ear problems. Children who accompany their parents into buildings where smoking is prevalent are affected by this elevated risk to their health.

Because children breathe faster, they are twice as likely to be affected by exposure to second-hand smoke. Because the chemicals in tobacco smoke linger in clothing, carpet, cars and furniture, children ingest these chemicals even when no one is actively smoking.

This is why the Mississippi Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics supports smoke-free air proposals this session. We have joined with other health advocates around the state including the State Department of Health, the American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association, the American Lung Association, the State Medical Association and the Mississippi Nurses Association to tell our legislators that it is time to join 26 other states and ban smoking in the workplace and in public places.

We know that smoking bans decrease the likelihood that teens will start smoking. Cigarette companies target teens as potential smokers because people who start smoking as adolescents are most likely to become addicted to nicotine and continue to smoke into adulthood. Cigarettes are designed for addiction via nicotine and 7,000 other added chemicals and compounds. Adolescents’ physiology is more sensitive to nicotine, which is why about 1,000 teens start smoking every day.

The U.S. Surgeon General has determined that there is no safe level of exposure to tobacco smoke. Even low levels of smoke exposure, including second-hand and residual smoke, lead to an immediate dysfunction and inflammation of the lining of blood vessels, which is implicated in heart attacks and strokes. Cities that have adopted smoke-free laws -- including Starkville and Hattiesburg -- have seen a significant decline in the number of heart attack patients admitted to their hospital emergency rooms.

Every year, approximately 550 Mississippians who do not smoke -- including babies and children -- die from exposure to secondhand smoke. According to Communities for a Clean Bill of Health, smoking-related illnesses cost Mississippi Medicaid alone approximately $264 million a year.

Our legislators are reluctant to pass a smoking ban, believing that large and small businesses should be able to decide for themselves whether to keep their facilities smoke-free. If secondhand smoke at any level was not a proven health risk, that might be a good reason to oppose a smoke-free air law. However, our own experience with smoking bans around the state is proving again that there is no safe level of secondhand smoke. It’s time to support smoke-free public places.
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Dr. Hill is Chapter Tobacco Control Champion for the Mississippi Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
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Copyright (C) 2011 by the Mississippi Forum 2/11



MISSOURI FORUM

By State Reps. Walt Bivins and Jill Schupp

Missouri is well behind the curve in adopting smoke-free standards for public places. In locales throughout the state, we are subjecting real people – customers, workers, children and people with breathing diseases to the harmful effects of secondhand smoke.

People have the right to breathe clean indoor air. They should be able to eat at restaurants and go into public buildings without being exposed to the serious health dangers of secondhand smoke.

A typical “non-smoker” who works in a smoky restaurant inhales almost an entire pack of cigarettes during just one eight-hour shift. Secondhand smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals and is estimated to cause over 30,000 deaths every year. Missourians alone spend $119 million on health care costs associated with secondhand smoke.

According to a 2004 U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) report: “…people at risk for heart disease should avoid all indoor places that allow smoking because short-term exposure to secondhand smoke creates an increased risk of heart attacks.”

Elimination of secondhand smoke exposure in public places is a matter of common sense and necessary to protect public health. The 2006 Surgeon General’s Report on Involuntary Smoking stated that there is no “risk-free” level of exposure to secondhand smoke. Furthermore, we learn that air cleaning and ventilation systems cannot eliminate all of the chemical exposure risks caused by secondhand smoke. The only way to stop exposure to deadly secondhand smoke is to end smoking in public places.

Missouri has begun to consider a smoke-free in public areas proposal. As word of this proposal has been gaining attention, employees are reaching out to tell their stories. One single mother, a casino employee, is imploring us to follow up and keep fighting to make her workplace smoke-free:

“Thank you for fighting for us. I'm a casino dealer. I'm also a single mom. I feel like I have to sacrifice my later years of life with my child and those joys, so that I can support him now. As a dealer we cannot wave the smoke from our face, ask the smoker to hold the cigarette back, or even move our heads to find air because it may offend the smoker.

My casino allows cigars, I've been made sick by them several times…We don't get an occasional cigarette in the face, we get it most of our day. More than one at a time, and several are chain smokers.

I'm not saying people don't have the right to smoke, I just think that I should have the right to perform my job and breathe at the same time. Please keep fighting and thank you!”

Missouri’s smoke-free proposal is designed to keep one person’s decision to smoke from interfering with other people’s health.

A comprehensive smoke-free public proposal is a public health issue. Just as food handling, plumbing, and traffic regulations are in place to support the public good, regulations for smoke-free public areas are a public service.

Over a decade ago when California became the first state to require bars and restaurants to go smoke-free, it was considered a novelty. Today, about half of the states have enacted such restrictions. Missouri’s most populous cities: Kansas City, Springfield, Columbia, St. Louis, and St. Louis County all have ordinances in place. Most Missourians already live in areas where smoking isn’t allowed in public places. Undoubtedly, we are ready for smoke-free public places. With the public health risks of secondhand smoke, nothing will be gained by further delaying the inevitable.

For the health and well-being of the people of Missouri, the time has come for a single statewide smoke-free law to protect our citizens from the serious health hazards of secondhand smoke.
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Bivins is a state representative (R-District 97). Schupp is a state representative (D-District 82).
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Copyright (C) 2010 by the Missouri Forum. 3/10