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Six-Month Public Smoking Ban Slashes Heart Attack Rate in Community
Published: April, 2003
In the first study
of its kind, researchers have found that the number of heart attack victims
admitted to a regional hospital dropped by nearly 60 percent during the first
six months that a smoke-free ordinance was in effect in the area.
The
study's authors attribute much of the sharp decline in acute myocardial
infarctions (AMI) to a near-elimination of the rapid and harmful effects of
secondhand smoke on blood platelets and the arteries that supply blood to the
heart. Damage to these and other functions increases the likelihood and
seriousness of the cardiovascular "event," they note.
In addition,
smoke-free environments encourage smokers to stop or reduce smoking, which also
reduces heart attack risk, they point out. The findings were reported at the
scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology meeting in
Chicago.
The study took place in Helena, Montana, where a smoke-free
ordinance went into effect June 5, 2002 and was suspended in a legal challenge
six months later. One hospital St. Peter's Community Hospital serves almost all
cardiac patients in the region, with a population of 65,913.
The
researchers compared hospital charts for patients admitted with primary or
secondary diagnoses of AMI from the smoke-free Helena area with those from
outside the area. They also compared records for the period of the smoke-free
ordinance with records from more than four years before that ordinance went
into effect. They accounted for seasonal differences so the records from the
smoke-free period could be reliably compared with the records from other times
of the year.
During an average six-month period, the number of hospital
admissions for AMI from people living or working in Helena is just under seven
per month. But during the six months that the ordinance was in force, the
number of hospital admission for AMI in Helena declined to less than four per
month, a drop of nearly 60 percent in the number of admissions. There was no
significant change in the number of admissions from outside the Helena
area.
The authors note that this is the first empirical evidence
suggesting that smoke-free policies not only protect people from long-term
dangers of secondhand smoke, but they also rapidly prevent heart attacks. "This
striking finding suggests that protecting people from the toxins in secondhand
smoke not only make life more pleasant; it immediately starts saving lives,"
says Stanton Glantz, Ph.D., professor of medicine at UCSF Cardiovascular
Research Institute and a statistics authority. "This work substantially raises
the stakes in debates over enacting and protecting smoke-free
ordinances."
Glantz, who serves as director of the Center for Tobacco
Control Research and Education at UCSF, provided the study's statistical
analysis. Many important physiological effects of secondhand smoke on
cardiovascular function occur within minutes of exposure and are nearly as
large as they are for smokers, studies have shown. Within five minutes, the
aorta becomes stiffer; within 30 minutes, blood platelets are activated, which
makes the blood "stickier" and damages artery linings.
In the same time
period, the ability of blood vessels to dilate to get more blood to the heart
and other organs is reduced. Within two hours of exposure to secondhand smoke,
heart rhythm is disturbed, according to a number of studies. The heart attack
risk for smokers is known to drop in half within a year of quitting, and
according to another analysis, smoke-free workplace and public place laws such
as the one in Helena encourage people to stop smoking. These effects, combined
with the effect of reduced exposure to secondhand smoke contributed to the
rapid drop in the incidence of heart attack, the researchers
suggest.
The study was undertaken in Helena by Richard P. Sargent, M.D.
and Robert M. Shepard, M.D., physicians at the city's St. Peter's Community
Hospital who serve on the hospital's health care quality board. It was presented
by Sargent at the American College of Cardiology meeting. The study was funded
in part by the National Cancer Institute.
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