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Secondhand Smoke's Effect On Kids

 
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Kr_iyer

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 9:38 am    Post subject: Secondhand Smoke's Effect on Kids Reply with quote

Secondhand Smoke's Effect on Kids


Secondhand smoke threatens everyone who inhales it, especially kids. Many young children live in a house with a smoker, and the result is an increased risk for health problems.

Secondhand smoke refers not only to the smoke given off by the burning end of a cigarette, pipe or cigar, but also to the smoke exhaled by smokers, the American Lung Association (ALA) says.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the ALA estimate that 3,000 nonsmokers die of lung cancer each year because of secondhand smoke. It also causes 35,000 deaths from heart disease in nonsmokers. It's so harmful the EPA labels it a Group A carcinogen, the category for the most harmful cancer-causing agents.

Forty-three percent of children encounter secondhand smoke in their homes, the ALA says. Children are more vulnerable to secondhand smoke because their lungs are still developing; exposure leads to decreased lung function.

These children are more prone to:

•Respiratory symptoms and acute lower respiratory tract infections. In children 18 months old and younger, secondhand smoke causes up to 300,000 cases of pneumonia and bronchitis each year, the ALA says. Secondhand smoke can cause asthma in children with healthy lungs, and it can worsen asthma for children who already have it.

•Ear infections. Secondhand smoke is linked to ear infections because the smoke causes fluid to build up in the middle ear, the ALA says.

•Sudden infant death syndrome. An EPA study in California estimated that up to 2,700 deaths from SIDS were linked to secondhand smoke, the ALA says.

The best thing a parent can do for a child is to quit smoking altogether, says Stephen Babb, program consultant at the Office on Smoking and Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). "It may take a while to quit, but while you are trying to quit, go outside to smoke. Just going to another room won't be sufficient. Secondhand smoke lingers."

Even if you can't quit smoking right away, you can protect your child from secondhand smoke:

•Don't smoke anywhere in your house and don't let other residents smoke inside.

•Make sure no one who visits your house smokes in front of your child.

•Check the smoking policies of places where your child spends time, such as day-care centers.

More than 2 million people quit smoking each year. If you want to quit, ask your doctor for help or find out if your employer has smoking cessation programs. If you didn't have a reason to quit before knowing what secondhand smoke can do to your child, you do now.

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