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Home and Car Related News
Effects on Smoke-Free Workplaces Waft into Homes
By: Randy Dotinga
Source: HealthScout News
Published: April 29, 2002
California's strict
anti-smoking laws have taken a hold in the state's workplaces and are inspiring
citizens to snuff out cigarettes in their own homes.
A survey released
today found that 73 percent of private homes banned smoking in 1999, more than
double the number in 1992. Over the same time period, the percentage of
children who lived in smoke-free homes grew from 38 percent to 82
percent.
The survey results suggest that "many more children are
protected [from smoking] in California than almost any other state," says study
author Elizabeth Gilpin, director of the biostatistics shared resource at the
Cancer Center of the University of California at San Diego.
The study
also found the percentage of smoke-free workplaces skyrocketed, from 35 percent
in 1990 to more than 93 percent in 1999.
California bans smoking in
most indoor spaces, including workplaces, restaurants and even bars and clubs
-- with a few exceptions.
The laws in almost all other states are much
more permissive. As of late last year, only Vermont and Utah forbid all smoking
inside restaurants, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. Twenty states, mostly in the South, placed no restrictions on
smoking in restaurants; 28 allowed or required designated non-smoking
areas.
In the California study, adults were surveyed by phone in 1992,
1996 and 1999. The state's workplace laws took effect in 1994, and the ban on
smoking in bars began in 1998.
Researchers interviewed 14,729 people by
phone in the 1999 survey. The findings appear in the May issue of the American
Journal of Public Health.
About one in three bar and restaurant workers
reported being exposed to secondhand smoke on the job, leading the researchers
to suggest that police boost enforcement of anti-smoking laws.
"The laws
are working, but you have to vigilant about keeping the public up to date,"
Gilpin says.
However, the survey didn't ask if the workers were employed
in restaurants and bars that set aside areas for smoking. California allows
smoking in outdoor patios at businesses where people eat and drink. It is also
only state that forbids smoking indoors at restaurants but allows if it a
smoking room has a separate ventilation system.
It's not clear why so
many private homes have banned smoking in California. However, the numbers are
clearly going up, and the 1999 survey found that nearly half of adult smokers
themselves live in homes where they aren't allowed to light up
inside.
"The population is becoming more aware and more used to
restrictions at work, and more willing to adopt them at home," Gilpin
says.
Dr. Gary Wong, a health education specialist with the Kaiser
Permanente Southern California health plan, agrees.
The laws have
"changed some of the social and community norms around smoking. In the past,
people thought as long as they were non-smokers, it [smoking] was something
that didn't pertain to them. There's much more of an awareness that there are a
great deal of hazards," he says.
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