Sitting In Nonsmoking
Section Helps Prevent Teen Smoking
Parent Behaviors
Influence Teens
The simple act
of requesting to sit in a nonsmoking section may have profound benefits
beyond avoiding second-hand smoke, according to a report in The
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.
Parents who routinely engage
in such anti-smoking behaviors in front of their adolescent children
- particularly parents who themselves smoke - appear to significantly
reduce their offspring's chances of becoming a smoker by their senior
year in high school, says Dr. M. Robyn Andersen of the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center.
Adolescent children of parents
who smoke were 13 percent less likely to become smokers by 12th grade
if their parents reported routinely asking to sit in designated smoke-free
areas of public establishments compared to adolescent children whose
smoking parents chose to sit in smoking sections, Dr. Andersen says.
Specifically, when parents
reported that they did not usually use nonsmoking sections, about 42
percent of their adolescent children became daily smokers.
When parents usually asked
to sit in nonsmoking sections, the daily smoking rate among their adolescent
children was 27 percent.
"I was surprised by the size
of the effects," Dr. Andersen says. "In particular, I didn't expect
them to be so large in the families where there was at least one smoking
parent.
"This was a happy surprise,
because most smoking parents don't want their kids to smoke," says Dr.
Andersen.
Looking
for Ways To Reduce Teen Smoking
The study, funded by the
National Cancer Institute (NCI) and a gift from
the Northern Life Insurance Company of Minneapolis, Minn., is the first
of its kind to assess the impact of nonsmoking sections on smoking behavior
in adolescents, Dr. Andersen said.
"Since Americans tend to
go out to eat quite a bit, asking to be seated in a nonsmoking section
may be a particularly effective way to communicate because it's a way
to make an anti-smoking statement on a regular basis. It's a chance
to bring it up," says Dr. Anderson.
The study also looked at
parents' reports of other anti-smoking actions such as banning smoking
in the home and asking others not to smoke in their presence, both of
which also had a significant impact on preventing daily teen smoking.
Adolescent children of smoking
parents who banned smoking in the home and asked people not to smoke
in their presence were 15 percent and 8 percent less likely to smoke,
respectively, compared to children of parents who did not.
A substantial percentage
of parents in the smoking families reported engaging in such anti-smoking
actions: 29 percent reported not allowing smoking in their homes, 35
percent reported usually sitting in nonsmoking sections, and 24 percent
reported asking others not to smoke around them.
However, the best thing a
parent can do to prevent their children from smoking is to refrain from
smoking themselves, Dr. Andersen says.
"If you as a smoking parent
don't want your kid to smoke, ideally you should quit smoking," she
says. "But even if you can't, or until you do, there are things
you can do, such as not allowing smoking in the house or sitting in
nonsmoking sections.
"These actions help you back
up your words when you tell your kids you don't want them to smoke,
even if you are addicted to cigarettes," Dr. Anderson says. "It
appears to be a way to communicate that this is something that you seriously
care about, it's important, and it's not just something you're saying."
Prevention
Leads to Non-smoking Adults
Previous research indicates
that if a child reaches age 18 without becoming a smoker, his or her
odds of remaining smoke-free are around 90 percent. Therefore, such
simple anti-smoking interventions potentially could prevent thousands
of young people in the US from becoming daily, long-term smokers, Dr.
Andersen says.
Statistics also show that
having a parent who smokes increases a child's chances of becoming a
smoker by 12th grade by 10 percent compared to children of nonsmoking
parents.
Dr. Andersen's findings are
based on data collected from more than 3,500 children and parents in
20 school districts in western Washington.
Information on parental-smoking
status and anti-smoking behavior was collected from the parents via
survey when their children were in the 11th grade. A year later, the
12th-grade students were asked to complete a classroom survey about
their current smoking behavior.
Student self-reports of smoking
activity were found to be largely accurate as verified through saliva
tests that checked for the presence of cotinine, a byproduct of nicotine.
Fifty-one percent of the
students were male and 90 percent were Caucasian. Since the study sample
was almost all Caucasian, reflecting the demographics of the area, the
results may not generalize to a multiethnic community.
The students in the study
served as the control, or comparison, group for the Hutchinson
Smoking Prevention Project, the largest and longest school-based
intervention trial ever conducted in smoking-prevention research.
Overall the study involved
8,400 students and 600 teachers throughout 40 school districts in Washington.
Results of this 15-year study, funded by the NCI, were
published in 2000.
The study found that implementation
of a school-based prevention program focused on teaching youth how to
identify and resist social influences to smoke - the main thrust of
smoking-prevention education and research for more than two decades
- simply does not work.
Always consult your child's
physician for more information.
Online
Resources
American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
American
Cancer Society
CDC
Quit Smoking Consumer Guide
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
National
Institute of Child Health & Human Development
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
US
Food and Drug Administration
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May 2004
Sitting
In Nonsmoking Section Helps Prevent Teen Smoking
Looking
for Ways To Reduce Teen Smoking
Prevention
Leads To Non-smoking Adults
Smoking
Facts
Online
Resources
Other
Resources:
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Smoking Facts
Diseases caused by smoking kill more
than 430,000 people in the US each year.
Even with anti-smoking campaigns
and medical disclaimers in place, many people continue to smoke or start
smoking every year.
According to the American
Cancer Society, 90 percent of new smokers are children and
teenagers, in many cases, replacing the smokers who quit or died prematurely
from a smoking-related disease.
Smokers not only have increased
risk of lung disease, including lung cancer and emphysema, but also
have increased risk of heart disease, stroke, and oral cancer.
Consider the latest statistics
available from the American Lung Association:
-
each day, more than
5,000 persons (younger than 18 years old) smoke their first cigarette
- more than 2,000 of these will become regular smokers every day
-
at least 4.5 million
adolescents (ages 12 to 17 years) are current smokers
-
among 12th graders,
20 percent smoke cigarettes daily
In posing health risks on
the body's cardiovascular system, smoking:
-
causes immediate and
long-term increases in blood pressure
-
causes immediate and
long-term increases in heart rate
-
reduces cardiac output
and coronary blood flow
-
reduces the amount
of oxygen that reaches the body's tissues
-
changes the properties
of blood vessels and blood cells - allowing cholesterol and other
fatty substances to build up (accumulate)
-
contributes to higher
blood pressure and increased risk of blot clot formation
-
damages blood vessels
-
doubles the risk of
ischemic stroke (reduced blood flow to the brain)
In addition, smoking has
been associated with depression and psychological distress.
The American Heart
Association (AHA) estimates indicate that approximately
37,000 to 40,000 people die each year from heart and blood vessel disease
caused by secondhand smoke.
Secondhand smoke is smoke
that is exhaled by smokers and smoke emitted from the burning end of
a lit cigarette, cigar, or pipe.
Both direct and indirect
smoking exposure poses significant health hazards to pregnant women,
infants, and young children.
Children and infants exposed
to tobacco smoke are more likely to experience ear infections and asthma,
and are at a higher risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) than
children and infants without the same exposure.
The following common symptoms
may be associated with exposure to secondhand smoke:
-
irritation of the eyes,
nose, and throat
-
coughing
-
excessive phlegm (mucus
in the airways)
-
chest discomfort from
lung irritation
-
chest pain, which may
indicate heart disease
The symptoms of secondhand
smoke may resemble other medical conditions and problems. Always consult
your adolescent's physician for a diagnosis.
Smoking, in addition to high
cholesterol, high blood pressure, physical inactivity, obesity, and
diabetes tops the list as a primary risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
In fact, smoking has been
classified as the single most preventable cause of premature death in
the US.
The AHA
states that eliminating smoking not only reduces the risk of coronary
heart disease, but also reduces the risk of repeat heart attacks and
death by heart disease by 50 percent.
Research also indicates that
smoking cessation is crucial in the management of many contributors
to heart attack, including atherosclerosis, thrombosis, coronary artery
disease, and cardiac arrhythmias.
Always consult your child's
physician for more information.
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