A Public Service Announcement from Greenwich Township

Smoke-free environments are widely supported by smokers and non-smokers and, if rightly enforced, they have the most effective way of protecting people from exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke. The right to clean air, free from tobacco smoke, is a human right.

Half the people who smoke today, which totals approximately 650 million people worldwide, will eventually die from tobacco. Equally alarming is the fact that hundreds of thousands of people who have never smoked die each year from diseases caused by breathing second-hand tobacco smoke.

Secondhand Smoke

 

The smoke released into the air from tobacco products, called environmental tobacco smoke or secondhand smoke, has a major health impact.  Of the estimated 480,000 smoking-related deaths in the United States, 53,000 have been attributed to secondhand smoke, making it the third leading cause of preventable death after active smoking and alcohol use.  People who have never smoked, but who have been exposed to secondhand smoke have an increased risk of lung cancer and heart disease

 

Secondhand Smoke and Lung Disease

 

In addition to nicotine, tobacco smoke contains tar, carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, phenols, ammonia, formaldehyde, benzene and nitrosamine.  Among the 4,000 individual compounds that have been identified in tobacco smoke, 60 have been found to produce irreversible changes in normal cells and produce cancerous tumors. 

 

Nonsmokers who are exposed to secondhand smoke absorb a less concentrated, but harmful dose of these chemicals just as smokers do.  The greater the exposure to secondhand smoke, the greater the level of these harmful compounds in the body.

 

It is estimated that secondhand smoke causes about 3,000 lung cancer deaths each year.  Moreover, children of smoking parents have significantly more respiratory tract infections than other children.  Secondhand smoke can also cause asthma and increase the number of episodes and severity of asthma in children.

 

Secondhand Smoke and Heart Disease

 

Secondhand smoke appears to be related to tobacco smoke-induced atherosclerosis, or the hardening or thickening of the arteries, which leads to cardiovascular disease.  Smoking increases the thickness of the innermost part of the arteries by 50 percent, while exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is associated with an increase of 20 percent, similar to the increase in ex-smokers. 

 

Approximately 50 percent of all coronary disease and stroke can be attributed to known risk factors like smoking.  Exposure to environmental tobacco smoke may explain the risk in some individuals who have not smoked.

 

Recent studies show that passive smoking is also a risk factor for ischemic heart disease.  Ischemic heart disease is a condition in which there is altered demand versus blood supply ratio to the heart.  In other words, the heart muscle requires more blood supply (oxygen) for it to function than what is supplied through its narrowed arteries (atherosclerosis).  Heart attack or injury to the heart muscle occurs when this mismatch exceeds a certain limit.

 

It is also suggested that secondhand smoking may be associated with injury to the lining of endothelial cells of the vessels supplying blood to the heart.  This, along with atherosclerosis, worsens the situation and makes the individual more susceptible to a heart attack.

 

Studies assessing the velocity of blood in the vessels supplying the heart found that passive smoking substantially reduced the flow in healthy nonsmokers. 

 

By Drew Edwards, MS; Mark S. Gold, MD
© 1999 University of Florida McKnight Brain Institute

Send mail to webmaster@greenwichtownship.com with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2008 Greenwich Township
Last modified: 05/06/2008
Website built and maintained by Dave Dabour
HomeNets