Philip Morris
Study: Others' Smoke Will Kill 47,000 Nonsmokers From Heart Disease in 940000
Fields
- Author
- Raeburn, P.
- Type
- COMP, COMPUTER PRINTOUT
- NEWS, NEWS ARTICLE
- Area
- WORLDWIDE REG AFFAIRS/LIBRARY
- Attachment
- 2048283084/2048283098
- Site
- N403
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- Stmn/R1-071
- Stmn/R1-072
- Stmn/R1-071
- Named Person
- Dawson, B.
- Glantz, S.
- Surgeon General
- Wells, A.J.
- Glantz, S.
- Document File
- 2048283082/2048283099/Wells, A Judson
- Named Organization
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Journal of the American College of Cardi
- OSHA, Occupational Safety & Health Administration
- RJR, R.J.Reynolds
- TI, Tobacco Inst
- Univ of Ca San Francisco
- American Lung Assn
- Journal of the American College of Cardi
- Author (Organization)
- Ap
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 2048283083/3095
Related Documents: - Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- kds65e00
Document Images
AP v513a ra 3exec Passive Smoking, Bjt,0592 08-01 3:17p
Study: others' Smoke will Kill 47,000 Nonsmokers From Heart Disease
in 1994
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
NEW YORK (AP) - Secondhand cigarette smoke will cause an
estimated 47,000 deaths and about 150,000 non-fatal heart attacks
in U.S. nonsmokers this year, a study says. That•s as much as 6o
percent higher than previous estimates.
The figures are projected from an analysis of 1985 data that
showed that heart disease caused by other people's smoke killed
62,000 people that year and caused as many as 200,000 heart
attacks.
The reduction since than is due to a decline in smoking and an
increase in restrictions on smoking in public places, the study
said.
The findings, to be published this week in the Journal of the
American College of Cardiology, appear amid a public relations
campaign by the tobacco industry. In a series of full-paqe
newspaper ads, Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds have raised
questions about links between secondhand smoke and lunq cancer.
The new study focuses on heart disease, which it said is a more
serious problem.
"Heart disease appears to be by far the major mortality risk
from passive smoking," the study concluded. "Practicinq
physicians would do well to warn their at-risk heart patients to
avoid smoky rooms."
The study was conducted by A. Judson Wells, a consultant to the
U.S. Occupational safety and Health Administration and a volunteer
with the American Lung Association.
Earlier calculations, including one by Wells himself, had
estimated that secondhand smoke was responsible for 32,000 to
37,000 heart disease deaths a year in nonsmokers.
Brennan Dawson of the Tobacco znstitute in Washington noted that
a 1986 U.S. Surgeon General's report on smoking failed to find a
link between secondhand smoke and heart disease.
"Nothing that's been published since then would cause a change
in that," Dawson said.
Researchers studying the problem, however, argue that a wealth
of data on such a link has been produced since the surgeon
qQneral's report.
Wells said that in his naw study, he used 1985 figures to allow
comparison with an Environmental Protection Agency study that used
the same data to show that secondhand smoke causes about 3,000 lung
cancer deaths a year in nonsmokers.
Wells* figures were based on a mathematical analysis of previous
studies showing the risks of secondhand smoke. He said his study
employed a new method devised by the EpA for its lung cancer
report. He is the first to apply the method to heart disease.
After calculating the number of heart-disease deaths blamed on
secondhand smoke, he arrived at the number of heart attacks by
simple multiplication. "There are three times as many heart
attacks as there are heart deaths," he said.
Nc figmr*~s are available yot to confirm V4,11z' 1994 projewtions.
"This is a much more sophisticated analysis than anybody's ever
done before," said Stanton Glantz of the University of California
at San Francisco, who had done one of the earlier estimates.
"This very large number of non-fatal events means you could be
having a very important offect on medical care costs," he said.

"It's a lot more expansive if somebody lives through a heart
attack than if they dio.N
The study noted that even brief exposure to other people's smoke
can trigger heart diseas4 in nonsmokers. Breathing cigarette smoke
for as little as 20 minutes to eight hours can produce immediate
changes in a nonsmokar's cardiovascular system, the study said.
