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Too many kids breathe others' smoke in cars: CDC

Mon Feb 6, 2012 12:02 AM EST
health, us, cars, med, smoke, secondhand-smoke
Lindsey Tanner, AP Medical Writer
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CHICAGO — Texting while driving, speeding and back-seat hanky-panky aren't all that parents need to worry about when their kids are in cars: Add secondhand smoke to the list.

In the first national estimate of its kind, a report from government researchers says more than 1 in 5 high school students and middle schoolers ride in cars while others are smoking.

This kind of secondhand smoke exposure has been linked with breathing problems and allergy symptoms, and more restrictions are needed to prevent it, the report says.

With widespread crackdowns on smoking in public, private places including homes and cars are where people encounter secondhand smoke these days. Anti-smoking advocates have zeroed in on cars because of research showing they're potentially more dangerous than smoke-filled bars and other less confined areas.

The research, from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was released online Monday in Pediatrics.

The study is based on national surveys done at public and private high schools and middle schools. Students were asked how often they rode in cars while someone was smoking within the past week. The most common answer was one or two days. The smoker could mean other kids or parents; the study didn't specify.

A CDC fact sheet suggests even small amounts of secondhand smoke can be risky.

"There is no risk-free level of exposure to secondhand smoke," the CDC says.

Overall, 22 percent of teens and pre-teens were exposed to secondhand smoke in cars in 2009, the latest data available. That figure declined gradually during the decade, from 40 percent in 2000, the study found. But still, the numbers of kids still facing the risks "is certainly problematic," said CDC researcher Brian King, the study's lead author.

"The car is the only source of exposure for some of these children, so if you can reduce that exposure, it's definitely advantageous for health," King said.

The CDC advises parents to not allow smoking in their homes and cars, and says opening a car window will not protect kids from cigarette smoke inside.

Measures banning smoking in cars when children are present have been enacted in a handful of states and proposed in several others. The study authors say similar bans should be adopted elsewhere.

___

Online:

American Academy of Pediatrics: http://www.aap.org

CDC: http://1.usa.gov/5aEqiK

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Groups: cweSpring2012
  • Regions: Chicago
  • Public Discussion (6)
RackNStack

Cigarettes need to be like 20 bucks a pack. Ten dollars of that would go into health care fund for that person who is buying them. Then, when they are diagnosed with a tobacco related illness, drain that fund for their care.

Amazing how the government allows the peddling of these cancer sticks, yet freaks out at the thought of people growing a marijuana plant in their backyard.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:31 AM EST
cannonballer

Exactly, tobacco is too big of a moneymaker for the Governmentto do anything about it, @!$%# people and their lung cancer, let em use Obamacare in a few years.

    #1.1 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 5:28 PM EST
    Reply
    SavickConn

    My father was a chain smoker. There were six of us when we drove anywhere and my "spot" was sitting behind my Dad. Every time he lit up the AC would blow smoke right back in my face. I think I smoked as much as he did on those long trips because sometime I became nauseous. My mother always said it was car sickness and I believed her. But while riding in cars without cigarettes, I did not get sick.

    Today, my father is dead. He died a long miserable death from emphysema. My mother now has COPD from living with him and his cigarettes for over half her life. She is hospitalized with pneumonia two or three times a year. My brother has chronic asthma. An I have both heart and breathing problems. I am a true believer (and proof) that children are healthier if parents don't smoke.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 4:18 PM EST
    jameseg

    SavickConn, thanks for sharing that personal story!

    I have not ridden in cars with smokers very often. On a few occasions when I did, I tried to put my head as close as possible to an open window. It still didn't eliminate the smoke and in cold or rainy weather wasn't pleasant.

    • 1 vote
    #2.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:41 PM EST
    Reply
    Da Quiet One

    I can see the future of this world. Everyone in a bubble screaming "quit fouling my air"! Meanwhile they are hacking and coughing from all the pollutants they have been breathing most of their life. I can live with smoke, I can't live with exhaust, rubber and all the other chemicals polluting the air.

      Reply#3 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 12:57 PM EST
      jameseg

      I can live with smoke, I can't live with exhaust, rubber and all the other chemicals polluting the air.

      Da Quiet One, we might live longer, happier, and healthier without any of those things polluting our air. And I am thankful steps are being taken to reduce our exposure to several chemicals in addition to those in cigarette smoke.

      • 1 vote
      #3.1 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 9:57 PM EST
      Reply
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