Other People's Smoke
Every year, 434,000 people die of illnesses related to their smoking. But
smokers are not the only ones whose health can suffer. Their tobacco smoke
in the air is called environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) or secondhand smoke.
Breathing it can be a hazard to your health and to the health of your child.
Secondhand smoke contains smaller amounts of the same chemicals that harm
smokers. ETS is so harmful that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) has classi- fied it as a "Group A" carcinogen 1.
"Group A" carcinogens are the most toxic substances known to cause
cancer in humans, also including benzene, radon, and asbestos.
The more often you're around secondhand smoke, the greater your risk for
health problems. Each year it causes about 3,000 lung cancer deaths in U.S.
adults who don't smoke. Secondhand smoke increases the nonsmoker's risk
for heart disease and makes worse the symptoms of adults already suffering
from asthma, allergies, or bronchitis.
Children are usually innocent victims­p;unable to choose whether or not
to be in a smoke-filled environment. Among infants to 18 months of age,
secondhand smoke is associated with as many as 300,000 cases of bronchitis
and pneumonia each year. It also increases the chances for middle ear problems,
causes coughing and wheezing, and worsens asthma conditions.
Facts like these show that other people's smoke is more than an annoyance.
Secondhand smoke is a serious threat to your good health.



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