How
Second Hand Smoke Threatens Your Health
by Alex Fir
| Secondhand
smoke or ETS is a combination of side stream smoke coming
straight from the burning tobacco and the mainstream smoke
that is exhaled by the smoker. It comprises of over 4000
chemical constituents, a large proportion of which are the
inducers of respiratory illnesses and around 40 are known
or suspected carcinogens. |
 |
The US Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) has classified ETS as a class A (known human) carcinogen
along with other known carcinogens such as arsenic, asbestos and
benzene etc.
ETS is unfiltered, thus the levels
of carcinogens in it are much more than in smoke inhaled directly
by an active smoker. Smoking of a cigarette produces smoke from
two major places, mainly from the tip of cigarette and from the
rest of the cigarette as the hot vapors liberated through the
cigarette and its filter.
About 70% to 80 % of ETS is from
the burning tip of cigarette and comprises of the highest levels
of nicotine, carbon monoxide, tar and various other carcinogens.
Therefore, a constant exposure to an ETS is apparently even more
injurious than directly smoking a cigarette for an equivalent
period.
Effects of Exposure to Secondhand
Smoke
Immediate effects:
Immediate effects of secondhand
smoking comprise of eye irritation, cough, sore throat, headache,
nausea and dizziness.
Long-term effects:
Lung cancer: The major cause of
lung cancer among non-smokers is secondhand smoke. One of the
studies revealed that hospitality workers who were exposed to
secondhand smoke became three times more prone to lung cancer.
Cardiovascular problems: ETS can
induce short-term and long-term harm to the heart by decreasing
its functional capacity and lowering the capacity of blood to
carry oxygen. Some of the chemicals in secondhand smoke can block
or harden the arteries, causing problems like atherosclerosis,
hypertension and later heart attack. In one of the studies, it
was found that secondhand smoking enhances the risk of a heart
attack by at least two times.
Stroke: Non-smokers exposed to
secondhand smoke run at least 80% more risk of stroke than do
the non-exposed people.
Asthma: One of the studies revealed
that the non-smokers exposed to ETS at work showed at least twice
the risk of asthma than the non-exposed people did. Those who
were exposed to ETS at home as well, showed as much as five times
greater risk for asthma than the non-exposed people did. In individuals
who already suffer from asthma, exposure to ETS can significantly
decline their lung function.
Breast Cancer: Some of the recent
studies have revealed ETS to increase the risk of breast cancer
among women.
Effects on the fetus:
Smoking by a pregnant woman can
have various serious consequences on the developing fetus.
• Babies born to women who
smoked during their pregnancy have a low birth weight and are
often born prematurely.
• Their organs, chiefly the
lungs, are smaller than of other babies and these babies are more
susceptible to cot death.
• They are more prone to
illness all their life and are more likely to become addicted
to the tobacco later in their life.
Effect on Children
• Kids that are exposed to
secondhand smoke from either parent during the first year of their
lives are far more likely to be afflicted with asthma, pneumonia,
bronchitis, bronchiolitis and other respiratory problems than
kids who were not exposed.
• Secondhand smoking may
also predispose children to the impairment of the blood circulatory
system, behavioral problems and olfactory (nasal) problems.
• It also increases their
susceptibility to develop cancer during their adulthood.
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