Sharp drop in second-hand smoke exposure
(Reuters) Updated: 2006-10-10 10:23 NEW YORK - People are much
less likely to be exposed to second-hand smoke these days, a new study shows.
Dr. Saverio Stranges of the University at Buffalo in New York and colleagues
had set out to investigate the association between cumulative lifetime exposure
to other people's cigarette smoke and heart attack risk. They found no such
link, but they did find a "dramatic decline" in reported second-hand smoke
exposure over time.
"In the absence of high levels of recent exposure to second-hand smoke,
cumulative lifetime exposure to second-hand smoke may not be as important a risk
factor for MI (heart attack) as previously thought," the team writes in the
Archives of Internal Medicine.
But evidence is mounting that short-term exposure can indeed be harmful, they
add, pointing to recent studies depicting sharp drops in hospital admissions for
heart attack after smoking was banned in workplaces or other public settings.
In the current study, the researchers had study participants report their
exposure to second-hand smoke at home, work and in public from childhood to the
present time. They compared 1,257 healthy individuals to 284 people who had
suffered heart attacks. All were non-smokers ranging in age from 35 to 70.
While heart attack risk was the highest among those with the most exposure to
second-hand smoke, the relationship was only significant for men's exposure to
second-hand smoke in the workplace or in public, the researchers found. And
after they controlled for other risk factors, the relationship disappeared.
The researchers also observed that reported exposure to second-hand smoke has
dropped "sharply" in recent years. For example, three-quarters of study
participants said they were exposed to cigarette smoke at home before the age of
21, but just 13 percent of women and about 12 percent of men said they were
exposed to smoking at home recently, while 10.8 percent of women and 23.5
percent of men reported recent exposure to second-hand smoke in the workplace.
"The fact that exposure to second-hand smoke is declining is a positive
development that is likely to contribute to reductions in mortality from CHD ,"
the researchers conclude.
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