Lorillard
Facts About Secondhand Smoke
Fields
- Alias
- 87805409/87805411
- Master ID
- 87805364/5929
Related Documents:- 87805364 Shb Reports on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments 930100 - 930600
- 87805365 Reports on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments 930100 - 930600
- 87805366
- 87805367
- 87805368
- 87805369
- 87805370
- 87805371
- 87805372
- 87805373
- 87805374-5385 Reports on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments Index of Articles Index of Appendices
- 87805387-5423 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805406-5407 Statement by Secretary of Labor Lynn Martin
- 87805408 Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Workplace
- 87805412-5413 Secondhand Smoke in Your Home
- 87805414-5415 Secondhand Smoke in the Workplace
- 87805416-5417 Secondhand Smoke in the Restaurants
- 87805418-5419 Secondhand Smoke in the Restaurants
- 87805420 Tips for Effective Letters
- 87805421-5422 Organizations with More Information
- 87805423 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805425-5484 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805450-5458 Remarks by Lautenberg (D - Nj) on S. 261 and S. 262 Preventing Our Kids From Inhaling Deadly Smoke (Pro Kids) Act of 930000 (Cr Page S-916, 114 Lines)
- 87805459-5461 U.S. Ties Secondhand Smoke to Cancer
- 87805462 A Dying Smoker's Tale
- 87805463-5465 Epa Designates Passive Smoking A 'class A' or Known Human Carcinogen
- 87805466-5471 S. 262 Preventing Our Federal Building Workers and Visitors From Exposure to Deadly Smoke (Pro-Feds) Act of 930000
- 87805472 Resolution Before the Boma Board of Governors
- 87805473-5480 Passive Smoking Questions and Answers
- 87805481-5483 Press Notice Passive Smoking Opens at the Science Museum
- 87805484 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805486-5543 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805515 Request for Information Regarding Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 87805516-5521 Ets Bibliography Smoking and Sudden Death Syndrome
- 87805522 Environmental Tobacco Smoke References: Otitis Media
- 87805523-5528 Ets and Perinatal Effects Bibliography
- 87805529-5537 Ets Bibliography Cancers
- 87805538-5542 A Bill to Amend the Health and Safety at Work Etc. Act 740000 So As to Provide for the Control of Smoking in Places of Work, and for Connected Purposes
- 87805543 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805545-5581 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805573-5574 Attachment II Exhibit 3
- 87805575-5580 Environmental Protection Integrated Risk Information System (Iris): Announcement of Availability of Background Paper
- 87805581 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805583-5619 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805606-5611
- 87805612-5618
- 87805619 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805621-5662 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805657-5659
- 87805660-5661 What Editorials Say About the Epa Report
- 87805662 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805664-5704 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805691 Junk Science
- 87805692-5703 Tobacco Institute of Australia Limited Plaintiff Stephen Woodward Defendant Statement of Claim No. 2146 of 930000
- 87805704 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805706-5742 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805732-5735 Joanne Bahura, Plaintiffs, Vs. S.E.W. Investors, Defendants Civil Action No. 90-Ca-10594 Judge Rufus King, III Plaintiff's Second Amended Designation of Expert Witnesses
- 87805736-5741 Involuntary Smoking the Factual Basis for Action
- 87805742 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805744-5777 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805777 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805779-5805 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805805 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805807-5849 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805838 Occupational Safety + Health Administration National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety and Health, Request for Nominations
- 87805839-5848 Testimony of Lynn Rhinehart Occupational Safety and Health Specialist Department of Occupational Safety and Health American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations Before the Senate Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Regulation Committee on Environment and Public Works on S. 656, the Indoor Air Quality Act of 930000
- 87805849 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- 87805851-5928 Report on Recent Ets and Iaq Developments
- 87805878-5926 Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabilization Corporation Plaintiffs, Vs. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Defendants. Civil Action No. 619301370 Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief
- 87805927 Tobacco Firms Sue Epa on Cancer Ruling Secondhand - Smoke Studies Based on Fudged Data, Industry Alleges
- 87805928 Ets / Iaq Report Fax Communication Sheet
- Type
- REPT, OTHER REPORT
- Site
- G65
- Author (Organization)
- Centers for Disease Control + Prevention
- Hhs, Dept of Health and Human Services
- Public Health Service
- Hhs, Dept of Health and Human Services
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Area
- SPEARS,ALEXANDER/OFFICE
- Characteristic
- EXTR, EXTRA
- Date Loaded
- 12 Feb 1999
- UCSF Legacy ID
- lxb40e00
Document Images
Facts About Secondhand Smoke
Some of the key facts about secondhand tobacco smoke and its dangers are
summarized below. Use them to Inform yout family and friends and to work for
smoke free policies in your community. '
General .
,
Secondhand smoke is a cause of disease, Including lung canoeir, in healthy nonsmokers.
Each year secondhand smoke kills an estimated 3,000 adult nonsmokers from lung '
cancer.
Secondhand smoke causes,30 times as many lung cancer deaths as all regulated air
pollutants oombined.
Secondhand smoke causes other respiratory problems In nonsmokers: coughing,
phlegm, chest discomfort, and reduced lung function.
For many people, secondhand smoke causes reddening, itching, and watering of the
eyes. About eight out of 10 nonsmokers report they are annoyed by others' cigarette
smoke.
More than 4,000 chemical compoeutds have been identified in tobacco smoke. Of these,
at least 43 are lanown to cause caneer in humans or animals.
At high exposure levels, nicotine is a potent and potentially lethal poison. Secondhand
smoke is the only source of nicotine in the air.
Nonsmokers exposed to cigarette smoke have in their body fluids significant amounts
of nicotine, carbon monoxide, and other evidence of secondhand smoke.
Three out of four nonsmokers have lived with smokers, and nearly half (45 percent) are ,
worried that secondhand smoke might cause them serious health problems.
More than 90 percent of Americans favor restricting or banning smoking in public
places. '
ISSUE 39
APPENDIX C
US. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES (DC
Pubtic H.akh S.wic.

Forty-six states and the District of Columbia in some manner restrict smoking in public
places. These laws range from limited prohibitions, such as no smoking on school
buses, to comprehensive clean indoor air laws that limit or ban smoking in virtually all
public places.
0
Laws restricting smoking in public places have been implemented with few problems
and at little cost to stwre and local government.
Smoking policies may have multiple benefits. Besides reducing exposure to
secondhand smoke, such policies may alter smoking behavior and public attitudes
about tobacco use. Over time, these changes may contribute to a significant reduction
in U.S. smoking rates.
Children
Each year, exposure to secondhand smoke causes 150,000 to 300,000 lower respiratory
tract infections (such as pneumonia and bronchitis) in U.S. infants and children
younger than 18 months of age. These infections result in 7,500 to 15,000
hospitalizations yearly.
Chronic cough, wheezing, and phlegm are more frequent in children whose parents
smoke.
Children exposed to secondhand smoke at home are more likely to have middle-ear
disease and reduced lung function.
Secondhand smoke increases the number of asthma attacks and the severity of asthma
in about 20% of this country's 2 million to 5'million asthmatic children.
Each year, U.S. mothers who smoke at least 10 cigarettes a day can actually cause
between 8,000 and 26,000 new cases of asthma among their children. . -
A recent study found that infants are three times more likely to die from Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome (SIDS) if their mothers smoke during and after pregnancy. Infants are
twice as likely to die from SIDS if their mothers stop during pregnancy and then
resume following birth.

Workplace
Workers exposed to secondhand smoke on the job are 34% more likely to get lung
cancer.
The simple separation of smokers from nonsmokers within the same airspace may
reduce, but cannot eliminate, the exposure of nonsmokers to secondhand smoke.
There is no safe level of exposure to a cancer-causing substance.
Survey responses indicate that at least 4.5 million American workers experience great
discomfort from exposure to secondhand smoke.
The best method for controlling worker exposure. to secondhand smoke is to eliminate
tobacco use from the workplace and implement a smoking oesaation program to
support smokers who decide to quit.
About 85% of businesses had adopted some form of smoking policies in 199I, up from
36% in 1986.
US. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES CIK
Pubtic H.a1th Selvia ".o" :OM
