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Passive Smoking
What is passive smoking?
Nonsmoking children who live in homes with smokers are exposed to cigarette
smoke. This situation is called "passive smoking."
The smoke comes from two sources: secondhand smoke and sidestream smoke. Secondhand
smoke is the smoke exhaled by the smoker. Sidestream smoke is the smoke that
rises off the end of a burning cigarette. Most of the smoke in a room is sidestream
smoke. Sidestream smoke contains 2 or 3 times more harmful chemicals than
secondhand smoke because it does not pass through the cigarette filter. At
its worst, a child in a very smoky room for one hour with several smokers
inhales as many bad chemicals as he would by actually smoking 10 or more cigarettes.
In general, children of smoking mothers absorb more smoke into their bodies
than children of smoking fathers because they spend more time with their mothers.
Children who are breast-fed by a smoking mother are at the greatest risk because
chemicals from the smoke are in the breast milk as well as the surrounding
air.
How does passive smoke harm my child?
Children who live in a house where someone smokes have more respiratory infections.
Their symptoms are also more severe and last longer than those of children
who live in a smoke-free home.
The impact of passive smoke is worse during the first 5 years of life, when
children spend most of their time with their parents. The more smokers there
are in a household and the more they smoke, the more severe a child's symptoms
are.
Passive smoking is especially hazardous to children who have asthma. Exposure
to smoke causes more severe asthma attacks, more emergency room visits, and
more admissions to the hospital. These children are also less likely to outgrow
their asthma.
The following conditions are worsened by passive smoking:
pneumonia
coughs or bronchitis
croup or laryngitis
wheezing or bronchiolitis
asthma attacks
flu (influenza)
ear infections
middle ear fluid and blockage
colds or upper respiratory infections
sinus infections
sore throats
eye irritation
crib deaths (SIDS)
school absenteeism caused by illness.
How can I protect my child from passive smoking?
Give up smoking.
You can stop smoking if you get help. Sign up for a stop-smoking class or
program. If you need some self-help reading materials, call your local American
Lung Association or American Cancer Society office. If you want your child
not to smoke, set a good example by not smoking yourself.
It is even more important to give up smoking if you are pregnant. The unborn
baby of a smoking mother has twice the risk for prematurity and newborn complications.
You must also avoid smoking if you are breast-feeding because harmful chemicals
from the smoke get into the breast milk.
For more information call the National Cancer Institute on their toll-free
line: 1-800-4-CANCER.
Never smoke inside your home.
Some parents find it very difficult to give up smoking, but all parents can
change their smoking habits. Smoke only when you are away from home. If you
have to smoke when you are home, smoke only in your garage or on the porch.
If you have to smoke inside your house, decide which room in your home will
be a smoking room. Keep the door to this room closed and open a window sometimes
to let fresh air into the room. Wear an overshirt in this room so your underlying
clothing does not collect the smoke. Never allow your child inside this room.
Don't smoke in any other parts of the house. Visitors must also smoke only
in this one room.
Never smoke when you are close to your child.
If you cannot limit your smoking to one room, at least don't smoke when you
are holding your child. Never smoke in a car when your child is a passenger.
Never smoke when you are feeding or bathing your child. Never smoke in your
child's bedroom. These precautions will reduce your child's exposure to smoke
and protect him from cigarette burns. Even doing just this much will help
your child to some degree.
Avoid leaving your child with someone who smokes.
Ask about smoking when you are looking for day care centers or baby sitters.
If your child has asthma, this safeguard is crucial.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health,"
Bantam Books.
Published by McKesson Provider Technologies.
Last modified: 2004-10-25
Last reviewed: 2005-03-01
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health
information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate
and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment
by a healthcare professional.
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