Environmental
tobacco smoke (ETS) is the mixture of smoke that comes from the
burning end of a cigarette, pipe, or cigar, and smoke exhaled by
the smoker. It is a complex mixture of over 4,000 compounds, more
than 40 of which are known to cause cancer in humans or animals
and many of which are strong irritants. ETS is often referred to
as "secondhand smoke" and exposure to ETS is often called
"passive smoking."
Health Effects
of Environmental Tobacco Smoke
In 1992, EPA
completed a major assessment of the respiratory health risks of
ETS (Respiratory Health Effects of Passive Smoking: Lung Cancer
and Other Disorders EPA/600/6-90/006F). The report concludes that
exposure to ETS is responsible for approximately 3,000 lung cancer
deaths each year in nonsmoking adults and impairs the respiratory
health of hundreds of thousands of children.
Infants and
young children whose parents smoke in their presence are at increased
risk of lower respiratory tract infections (pneumonia and bronchitis)
and are more likely to have symptoms of respiratory irritation like
cough, excess phlegm, and wheeze. EPA estimates that passive smoking
annually causes between 150,000 and 300,000 lower respiratory tract
infections in infants and children under 18 months of age, resulting
in between 7,500 and 15,000 hospitalizations each year. These children
may also have a build-up of fluid in the middle ear, which can lead
to ear infections. Older children who have been exposed to secondhand
smoke may have slightly reduced lung function.
Asthmatic children
are especially at risk. EPA estimates that exposure to secondhand
smoke increases the number of episodes and severity of symptoms
in hundreds of thousands of asthmatic children, and may cause thousands
of non-asthmatic children to develop the disease each year. EPA
estimates that between 200,000 and 1,000,000 asthmatic children
have their condition made worse by exposure to secondhand smoke
each year. Exposure to secondhand smoke causes eye, nose, and throat
irritation. It may affect the cardiovascular system and some studies
have linked exposure to secondhand smoke with the onset of chest
pain. For publications about ETS, go to Smoke Free Homes web site
(www.epa.gov/smokefree/index.html), the IAQ Publications (www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/index.html#environmental
tobacco smoke) page, or contact EPA's Indoor Air Quality Information
Clearinghouse (IAQ INFO), 800-438-4318 or (703) 356-4020.
Reducing Exposure
to Environmental Tobacco Smoke
Don't smoke
at home or permit others to do so. Ask smokers to smoke outdoors.
The 1986 Surgeon
General's report concluded that physical separation of smokers and
nonsmokers in a common air space, such as different rooms within
the same house, may reduce - but will not eliminate - non-smokers'
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke.
If smoking indoors
cannot be avoided, increase ventilation in the area where smoking
takes place.
Open windows
or use exhaust fans. Ventilation, a common method of reducing exposure
to indoor air pollutants, also will reduce but not eliminate exposure
to environmental tobacco smoke. Because smoking produces such large
amounts of pollutants, natural or mechanical ventilation techniques
do not remove them from the air in your home as quickly as they
build up. In addition, the large increases in ventilation it takes
to significantly reduce exposure to environmental tobacco smoke
can also increase energy costs substantially. Consequently, the
most effective way to reduce exposure to environmental tobacco smoke
in the home is to eliminate smoking there.
Do not smoke
if children are present, particularly infants and toddlers.
Children are
particularly susceptible to the effects of passive smoking. Do not
allow baby-sitters or others who work in your home to smoke indoors.
Discourage others from smoking around children. Find out about the
smoking policies of the day care center providers, schools, and
other care givers for your children. The policy should protect children
from exposure to ETS.
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