Would you have a picnic on the grounds of a toxic waste fill? Stupid
question, right? Well, do you ever eat in a restaurant that allows smoking?
Every time you do, you breathe in air that can be just as polluted as the
air that's found around a toxic land fill....as polluted as the air found
around six busy highways. Yuck!
Some people call Environmental Tobacco Smoke, Second
Hand Smoke, but there is nothing second hand about it. Environmental
Tobacco Smoke (ETS) is a mixture of "mainstream smoke" (the
smoke that is exhaled by smokers) and "sidestream smoke" (smoke
that comes from the burning end of a cigarette or other tobacco product).
ETS has many of the same cancer causing and toxic agents that are in mainstream
smoke, but at higher levels! Just think, every time you are around
someone who smokes you are breathing in chemical compounds like tar, carbon
monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, formaldehyde, benzene, and nicotine. The list
goes on and on. There are over 4,000 chemical compounds that have
been identified in tobacco and tobacco smoke. It's no wonder that tobacco
smoke is classified as a Class A Carcinogen! This category is used only
for the most dangerous cancer-causing agents in humans. Why, breathing
in ETS is even more dangerous than being exposed to asbestos!
People have known for a long time that smoking tobacco
is a major cause of death and disease. In fact, it's the number # 1
preventable cause of death in the nation. It causes over 400,000 people
to die in the United States every year. It's responsible for more deaths
than cocaine, heroin, alcohol, fire, automobile accidents, homicides,
suicides, and AIDS combined. Now we know that Environmental Tobacco Smoke
kills too! In the US, ETS takes the lives of more than 50,000 people every
year from heart disease, lung cancer, and other cancers. (Glantz &
Parmley, 1991; USDHHS,1986).
Can you imagine how many lives the loss of 400,000 or
50,000 people affect? Think how many people are hurt when one person
dies! The sons, daughters, sisters, brothers, husband, wife, mother, father....
One life is too precious to lose...Your life is too precious to lose.
The next time you go into a room where there is smoking,
think about the poisons that are in the air. Don't let anyone tell you
that you are safe from the dangers of ETS because the building which smoking
is allowed in has a ventilation system. Ventilation systems Do Not
eliminate ETS. A ventilation system may help to reduce the odor from
ETS, but it doesn't remove the chemicals. Some restaurants have "Smoking"
and "No Smoking" areas. This really doesn't protect against
the dangers of ETS either. Having a smoke-free section of a restaurant
is like trying to have a chlorine-free section of a swimming pool.
What can you do to protect yourself? Avoid places where
there is smoking. Now, that may not be easy. You may have relatives who
smoke. Maybe you can persuade them to read about the deadly affects of
Environmental Tobacco Smoke. Tell them you are concerned for your health,
as well as theirs.
Next, write the owners of local restaurants, skating rinks,
and bowling alleys. Tell them that you would enjoy coming to their places
of business if they would not allow smoking.
Write your legislators. Tell them you want their help
in protecting your health. Tell them it is not enough to have just municipal
buildings smoke free. Explain that we need the air in ALL public
buildings to be safe to breathe.
Be aware that the tobacco companies are fighting hard
to make sure that smoking is allowed in public buildings. Their motive
becomes clear when you realize that 26.5 billion packs of cigarettes are
sold in the United States every year. That means 840 packs are sold per
second! Companies that manufacture cigarettes reported after-tax profits
of $7.2 billion dollars in 1989. They use some of this money to hire doctors
and scientists who may be willing to lie about test results. When you
read a report, always consider the source. Rely on reports written by
organizations like the Medical Society and the American Heart Association.
We've provided some good links for you to check out on our resources page.
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Facts
As early as 1986, the Surgeon General reported that the effects
of smoking on nonsmokers are as severe as the direct effects on
smokers.
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ETS is so dangerous that the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) classified tobacco smoke as a Class A Carcinogen...a
category that is used for only the most dangerous cancer-causing agents
in humans.
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It is responsible for approximately 3,000 lung cancer
deaths each year in nonsmokers.
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ETS contains more than 4,000 substances, more than
40 of which are known to cause cancer in humans or animals and many
of which are strong irritants.
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Every year 53,000 nonsmoking Americans die from inhaling
other
people's tobacco smoke.
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Each year ETS kills an estimated 3,000 adult nonsmokers
from
lung cancer.
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It is reported that more than 10,000 people die every
year from
cancers (other than lung cancer) caused by ETS.
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It is estimated that 30,000 to 60,000 nonsmokers die
each
year because of ETS- caused heart disease, and three times
that many people have nonfatal heart attacks as a result of ETS
exposure.
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According to researchers, nonsmokers are much more
susceptible
to heart damage from secondhand smoke than are smokers because their
bodies haven't built up defenses against the onslaught of tobacco
poisons.
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Nonsmokers exposed to ETS at work are 39 percent more
likely to get lung cancer than nonexposed nonsmoking employees.
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ETS is responsible for 1,900 to 4,800 infant deaths
from
prenatal (while in the womb) disorders and 1,200 to 2,200 deaths
from SIDS (Sudden Death Syndrome).
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Among American children, tobacco is associated with
an
estimated 284 to 360 deaths from lower respiratory tract illnesses
and fires initiated by smoking materials and with over 300 deaths
from lower respiratory tract illnesses and fires initiated by smoking
materials and with over 300 fire-related injuries.
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ETS is the cause of serious respiratory illness in
children, including
bronchitis, pneumonia, asthmatic episodes, new cases of asthma,
and sudden infant death syndrome.
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At least three times as many infants die of SIDS caused
by maternal smoking as are killed as a result of homicide or child
abuse. The risk of SIDS (crib death) doubles for each hour a day a
baby spends in a room where people smoke.
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Among American children, tobacco is associated with
an estimated
284 to 360 deaths from lower respiratory tract illnesses and fires
initiated by smoking materials and with over 300 fire-related injuries.
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ETS causes: 14,000 to 21,000 tonsillectomies and or
adenoidectomies; 529,000 doctor visits for asthma; 1.3 million to
2 million visits for cough; and in children under 5 years, 260,000
to 436,000 episodes of bronchitis and 115,000 to 190,000,000
episodes of pneumonia.
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Among teenagers who do not smoke, 45% of them live
in a home where someone else does.
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Restaurants are the most frequented public places
in America.
The average American visits a restaurant 3.5 times a week-
every other day. Many of the patrons are young visitors, who are especially
sensitive to ETS.
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Restaurants that have separate smoking and nonsmoking
sections cannot eliminate the exposure to the toxins from secondhand
smoke. Ventilation systems are designed to efficiently circulate air
within an enclosed environment, not to filter and clean it. Trying
to have a smoke-free section of a restaurant is like trying to have
a chlorine-free section of a swimming pool. John Repace, OSHA/EPA,
and John P. Robinson from the University of Maryland report
that "hospitality industries" - waiters and service workers in restaurants,
bars, and bowling alleys encounter indoor air pollution levels approaching
those found in coal mines and steel
Other Effects of
ETS
- The Center for Marine Conservation found cigarette butts to be the
largest source of beach trash, representing 17 percent of all trash,
in its 1995 study in 33 states.
- Fires started by cigarettes are the leading cause of fire death in
the United States. Smoking and smoking materials caused 151,000 fires
in buildings, vehicles, and outdoors in 1993. Those fires killed 1,029
people and injured 3,496 people (not including firefighters). One-third
of the people killed and injured in cigarette-caused fires are nonsmokers,
according to one estimate.
- Smoking is associated with increased rates of accidents. The National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health reports that workers who
smoke have twice as many on-the-job accidents as workers who don't smoke.
- Several auto insurance companies have determined that their policy
holders who smoke have up to 2.6 times as many auto accidents
as policy holders who don't smoke.
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1. Health:
It's a known fact that tobacco smoke is dangerous. Hundreds of authorities
agree tobacco smoke is a health hazard and that action needs to be
taken. Among them: the National Cancer Institute, US EPA, Surgeon
General, National Academy of Sciences, World Health Organization,
AMA, Cancer, Heart, and Lung Associations, courts and governments
throughout the nation.
2. Safety:
Fires started by cigarettes are the leading cause of fire death in
the United States. Smoking and ETS also increase accidents and occupational
hazards.
3. Population:
The overwhelming majority of adults don't smoke. The national average
of nonsmokers is 76%.
4. Public opinion:
Studies show that almost all non smokers and the majority of people
who smoke support ETS controls.
5. ETS legislation:
Approximately 200 cities and counties in 16 states have smokefree
workplace ordinances and there are state laws in Maryland, California,
and Washington. More than 125 local governments in 18 states have
enacted smokefree restaurant legislation, as have the states of Maine,
Vermont, Utah, and California. Approimately 100 local jurisdictions
have mandated smokefree bars and California has statewide bar legislation.
These ordinances are in place thorughout the nation in big and little
cities, in rich and modest-income neighborhoods, in tourist and bedroom
communities, including Mesa, Pasadena, Los Angeles, Austin, Honolulu,
Boston, New Yourk City, and a number of places in North Carolina and
West Virginia.
6. New Jersey's experience with legislation and policies:
Highland Park enacted smokefree workplaces and public places legislation
in 1996. Secuacus, Lawrence Township,and Glassboro enacted a 100%
smokefree restaurant 1999. Most large employers and hundreds of small
employers have adopted smokefree policies. All the major malls are
smokefree. More than a thousand restaurants (not counting chains and
fast-food) are smokefree; many of them have bars.
7. Economics:
Numerous scientific studies, based on the tax returns of restaurants
and bars, show no loss of income (and, in some places, increased profits)
when municipalities enact smoke free air laws, even where neighboring
communities have no legislation (so patrons could go to the next town).
8. Restaurants and bars:
Eating and drinking estalishments need to be included because they
are among the most smoke-polluted places; restaurants are the most
frequented public places; and wait staff and bartenders deserve workplace
protection as much as any other employees.
9. Ventilation:
ASHRAE standards for indoor air/ventilation now recognize there are
no thresholds for safe exposure to ETS.
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New statewide and local public opinion polls show support by New Jerseyans
for smokefree air in workplaces and restaurants.
An Eagleton Institute poll conducted in late March found that
84% of people polled think places where people work should be smokefree.
Smokefree restaurants drew 68% support and when people were asked, "If
you worked in a restaurant, would you want the restaurant to be smokefree?"support
rose to 75%. More than 65% of people polled also said it bothered them
when there was smoking or secondhand smoke near them in a restaurant.
During the spring and fall of 1999, members of C.O.S.T. took surveys
of 492 people at two locations in their town. The surveys showed that
84% of those polled prefer smokefree dining.
In Ocean City, High School students in (SCAT) Student Coalition
Against Tobacco asked people if they favored a city wide ordinance that
would require restaurants to be smokefree. In the poll of about 180 people
that took place on Jan. 8, 2000, 84% declared support for legislation
requiring restaurants to be smokefree.
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Sources
include:
The American Cancer Society A Tobacco and Nicotine Tutorial
by John Slade, M.D. 1994; Addressing Tobacco in the Treatment and Prevention
of Other Addictions, p.6
The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
June 1994, April 1995
US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Report Respiratory
Health Effects of Passive Smoking: Lung cancer and Other Disorders, January
1993)
Circulation, the Journal of the American Heart Association,
January 1991
Journal of Family Practice, April 1995, Joseph DiFranza and Robert Lew,
quoted in Smokefree Air Everywhere, p.16.
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