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Home and Car Related News
Environmental Tobacco Smoke Seriously Endangers Children's
Health
Source: WHO/35
Published: June 16, 1999
Tobacco smoke seriously damages children's health, a new
World Health Organization (WHO) report, entitled International Consultation on
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS) and Child Health, released today in London,
concludes.
The research results, announced today by WHO
Director-General Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland at the Third Ministerial Conference
on Environment and Health, show that environmental tobacco smoke causes a wide
variety of adverse health effects in children, including pneumonia, bronchitis,
coughing, wheezing, worsening of asthma and middle-ear infections. Children's
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke may also contribute to cardiovascular
disease in adulthood.
The report notes that:
700 million
children - almost half of all children worldwide - live in a home of a smoker.
The large number of exposed children, coupled with the evidence that ETS causes
illness in children, constitutes a substantial public health
threat.
Children whose mothers smoke have an estimated 70 percent more respiratory
problems, including croup, bronchitis and pneumonia as well as middle-ear
infections; the prevalence is 30 percent higher if the father smokes.
Infants of mothers who smoke have almost five times the risk of sudden
infant death syndrome. There are also other well documented effects, including
reduced birth weight and reduced lung functioning.
Annual health costs
attributed to environmental tobacco smoke in the United States alone amount to
US $1 billion. If the problems related to reduced birth weight caused by
maternal smoking are added to this, the figure doubles.
"Swift action to
highlight the need for strong public policies to protect children from exposure
to tobacco smoke is essential," the report concludes. "These policies should
aim to ensure the right of every child to grow up in an environment free of
tobacco smoke. This can be achieved by two complementary
strategies: (1) eliminating children's contact with tobacco smoke in utero and
in childhood; and (2) reducing overall consumption of tobacco products."
For further information, journalists can contact Gregory Hartl, Office
of Press and Public Relations, WHO, Geneva.
Telephone (41 22) 791 44
58. Fax (41 22) 791 48 58. E-Mail: hartlg@who.int
All WHO Press Releases, Fact Sheets and Features as well as other information
on this subject can be obtained on Internet on the WHO home page http://www.who.int
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