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Restaurant Related News
Health Experts: Second-Hand Smoke Causes Lung Cancer
By: Patricia Reaney
Source: Reuters
Published: June 19, 2002
LONDON, England -- Billions
of people around the world who are exposed to second-hand smoke may have
an increased risk of developing lung cancer because passive smoking causes
the disease, health experts said on Wednesday.
A
comprehensive review of medical studies by researchers at the International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) showed passive smoking causes cancer and
that chemicals and gases and tobacco contribute to cancer of the stomach,
liver, kidney, uterine cervix and to myeloid leukaemia.
"Involuntary
smoking -- breathing and second-hand smoke -- is a carcinogenic to humans,"
said professor Jonathan Samet, of John Hopkins University in Baltimore and a
member of the IARC group.
Although the concentrations are not as high,
passive smokers are breathing in the same carcinogens as smokers.
"There
is elegant evidence ranging from what can be measured in air to what can be
measured in the body fluids and hair of non-smokers to show that those
carcinogens are being breathed in. They are being absorbed into the body,"
Samet told a news conference.
"To my knowledge it is the first time an
organization with the global sweep has reached that conclusion," he
added.
IARC, an extension of the World Health Organization (WHO), is
based in Lyons, France. Its findings on smoking are based on an independent
analysis of more than 50 medical studies by 29 experts from 12
countries.
The scientists said that they found no increased risk from
second-hand smoke for childhood cancers that they did not know what impact
long-term exposure to tobacco smoke would have on children as they grow
older.
ASTOUNDING PROPORTIONS
An estimated 1.2 billion
people worldwide smoke cigarettes, cigars, pipes or bidis - tobacco rolled into
a leaf - and expose billions more non-smokers to the carcinogenic chemicals,
according to Samet.
Marcia Williams, of the British anti-tobacco
campaigning group ASH, called for urgent action.
"Passive smoking is
quite clearly more than just the nuisance many of the world's tobacco companies
would have us believe. People are harmed and killed by it and it is time
industry, government and smokers themselves woke up to this fact," she said in
a statement.
The scientists also found evidence that in addition to
causing 90 percent of lung cancer cases, smoking also contributes to cancers of
the stomach, liver, kidney, uterine cervix and a type of leukemia - but that is
not linked to breast or prostate cancer.
Samet said scientists are only
beginning to see the full picture of what happens when a generation begins to
smoke at an early age and continues to smoke throughout their adult
lives.
"We're still learning about just how damaging cigarette smoking
is. We found that cancers beyond those that we have previously listed as caused
by smoking can now be added to the list," he said.
Tobacco smoke
contains over 4,000 chemicals in the form of particles and gases. Carbon
monoxide, ammonia, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide are among the potentially
toxic ones.
About one-half of persistent smokers will be killed by a
tobacco related disease and half of those deaths will occur in middle
age.
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