Philip Morris
Tobacco Smoke & the Nonsmoker Ambient Tobacco Smoke and Health Claims - Expert Assessment
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- 2023264802-4815 Tobacco Smoke and the Nonsmoker A Review of the Scientific Aspects and Commentary on the Public Policy Aspects of Passive Smoking
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- Gori, G.
- Surgeon General
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2023264796

TOBACCO SMOKE & THE I
Many claims have been made about the alleged~
health effects of ambient tobacco smoke. Among the
most frequent are thatsmoking in the home and in
public places, especially the workplace, causes lung
cancer and diseases of the lung and heart; in
nonsmokers and that itis particularly harmful to those
who already have respiratory and heart disease.
However, critical analyses by independent scientists of
studies making such claims, together with other studies
which have found no such associations, show that the
scientific results are contradictory and thus there is no
unequivocal evidence to substantiate adverse health
claims.
An international symposium held in,1983 at the
University of Geneva to discuss scientific developments
in this area concluded:
"An aier~ll ``~~ ased upon available scientific 4~;
~ata ie -, uslo±irtfiat an increased risk (of '
~urig ; inokers;from (environrnental :.f
'
~ totia ure J~'~'`snotbbeen establlshed.°~
°'
.YFX
In May, 1983, scientists and'epidemiologists at a
workshop on "Respiratory Effects ofiInvoluntary Smoke
Exposure: Epidemiologic Studies" sponsored by the U.
National Institutes of Health concluded:
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Scientists at the "International Symposium on Medical
Perspectives on Passive Smoking"held in Vienna in
April, 1984, and co-sponsored by the German and~
Austrian Societies for Occupational Medicine, and' in
co-operation with the World Health Organization (WHO)
and the International Green Cross stated inia press
release that legislative measures intended to "protect"
people from ambient tobacco smoke exposure could not
be justified by the available health data.

roxsMoxEa - suMMAaY
Even organisations opposed to smoking have
questioned the scientific evidence regarding these health
claims. For example, in the United Kingdomthe Royal
College of Physicians'#ourth report (1983) on smoking
and health noted'that~ "the extent1o which passive smoke
exposure can damage the health of otherwise healthy
individuals is by no means clean°4 Another review in the
U.K, the Third Report of the Independent Scientific
Committee on Smoking and Health (1983), stated: "We
~ believe that many of the reported associations, including
that between passive smoking and lung cancer, have not
been establi'shed'unequivocally; rigorously planned
epidemiological and other studies are needed despite the
obvious technical difficulties."5'
A 1983 WHO study asserted that "although
epidemiological studies have been undertaken to
investigate the possible carcinogenicity of passive
smoking and its relationship to respiratory diseases,
further work is clearly required."6
And while the 1984 U.S. Surgeon General's Report on
chronic obstructive lung disease discussed the issue ofi
ambient tobacco smoke at length, it conceded that
"limited existing data yield conflicting results concerning
the relationship between passive smoke exposure and
symptoms in patients with known pulmonary disease.'7
The claim that exposure to ambientitobacco smoke is
known to be a cause of disease in nonsmokers carries a
great deal of emotional weight. Scientists have warned
about the danger of permitting emotion and fear to
obscure the scientific facts about public smoking. For
instance, Dr. Gio Gori, a former U.S. National:Cancer
Institute researcher, recently stated:
"What needs to bestated is that, despite'numerous ;
and extensive trials,;available evidence has not been
found that a rriasswe_publichealth problem attributable
to.passiVe sRloking exists:"a
Once the healthiclaims regarding ambient tobacco
smoke are placed in proper perspective, any, call for the
prohibition of smoking in public places becomes simply
a social and political and not a medical issue.

References
1. Rylander R, "Workshop Perspectives," ETS-Environmental
Tobacco Smoke: Report from a Workshop on Effects and
Exposure Levels, Eur J Respir Dis; Suppl. 133(65), 1984',
pp.143-145-
2. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public
Health Service, National Institutes of Health, "'Report of
Workshop on Respiratory Effects of Involuntary Smoke
Exposure: Epidemiologic Studies; May 1-3, 1983,"'
December, 1983.
3: Valentin, H. and E. Wynder, "Health,Danger Through,
Passive Smoking Not Proven: Physicians' View on Passive
Smoking," (Press release for Symposiumon "Passive
Smoking from a Medical Point of View," April 9-12, 1984,
Vienna, Austria).
4. Royal College of Physicians of London, "Breathing Other
People's Smoke," Health or Smoking? Follow-up Report of
the Royal College of Physicians, (London, Pitman
Publishing Ltd;, 1983)a pp. 72-81.
5. Froggatts P Third'Report of the Independent Scientific
Committee on Smoking and Health (London: Her Majesty's
Stationery Office, 1983)j
6. World Health Organization, "Indoor Air Pollutants: Exposure
and Health Effects: Report on a WHO Meeting,"' June 8-11,
1983, Nordlingen, EURO Reports and Studies, 78.
7 U.S. Public Health Service, "Chapter 7 Passive Smoking,"
The Health Consequences of Smoking: Chronic Obstructive
Lung Disease. A Report of the Surgeon General;, U.S:
Department of Health and Human Services, 1984, pp.
363-410.
8. Gorij G., "Sidestream Smoke-Faa and Fiction,°'ASHRAE
Transactions, 90(1): 1984.
December 1985
For fuller listiof references see Tobacco Advisory Council
booklet "Tobacco smoke and the nonsmoker", dated
December 1985..
i
!
Tobacco Advisory Council, Glen House, Stag Place, London SW 1 E 5AG
Tel: 01-828 2803/2041

For further information
The leaflet you have just read is based upon a much more
comprehensive review of the scientific and public policy aspects of
"passive smoking'i.
If you would like a copy, please fill in this slip and post it to the address
overleaf.
Please send'me a copy ofi
Tobacco Smoke and the Nonsmoker - a review of the scientific
aspects and'commentary on the public policy aspects of passive
smoking.
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