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The Risks of Cigarette Smoke
Discovered in the early 1800s and named nicotianine, the
oily essence now called nicotine is the main active ingredient of tobacco.
Nicotine, however, is only a small component of cigarette smoke, which contains
more than 4,700 chemical compounds, including 43 cancer-causing substances. In
recent times, scientific research has been providing evidence that year of
cigarette smoking vastly increases the risk of developing fatal medical
conditions. In addition to being
responsible for more than 85 per cent of lung cancers, smoking is associated
with cancers of, amongst others, the mouth, stomach and kidneys, and is thought
to cause about 14 per cent of leukemia and cervical cancers. In 1990, smoking
caused more than 84,000 deaths, mainly resulting from such problems as
pneumonia, bronchitis and influenza. Smoking, it is believed, is responsible
for 30 per cent of all deaths from cancer and clearly represents the most
important preventable cause of cancer in countries like the United States
today. Passive smoking, the breathing in
of the side-stream smoke from the burning of tobacco between puffs or of the
smoke exhaled by a smoker, also causes a serious health risk. A report
published in 1992 by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) emphasized
the health dangers, especially from side-stream smoke. This type of smoke
contains more, smaller particles and is therefore more likely to be deposited
deep in the lungs. On the basis of this report, the EPA has classified
environmental tobacco smoke in the highest risk category for causing
cancer. As an illustration of the health
risks, in the case of a married couple where one partner is a smoker and one a
non-smoker, the latter is believed to have a 30 per cent higher risk of death
from heart disease because of passive smoking. The risk of lung cancer also
increases over the years of exposure and the figure jumps to 80 per cent if the
spouse has been smoking four packs a day for 20 years. It has been calculated
that 17 per cent of cases of lung cancer can be attributed to high levels of
exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke during childhood and adolescence.
A more recent study by researchers at the University ofCalifornia at San Francisco (UCSF) has shown that second-hand cigarette smoke
does more harm to non-smokers than to smokers. Leaving aside the philosophical
question of whether anyone should have to breathe someone else’s cigarette
smoke, the report suggests that the smoke experienced by many people in their
daily lives is enough to produce substantial adverse effects on a person’s
heart and lungs. The report, published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association (AMA), was based on the
researchers’ own earlier research but also includes a review of studies over
the past few years. The American Medical Association represents about half of
all US doctors and is a strong opponent of smoking. The study suggests that
people who smoke cigarettes are continually damaging their cardiovascular
system, which adapts in order to compensate for the effects of smoking. It
further states that people who do not smoke do not have the benefit of their
system adapting to the smoke inhalation. Consequently, the effects of passive
smoking are far greater on non-smokers than on smokers.
This report emphasizes that cancer is not caused by a single
element in cigarette smoke; harmful effects to health are caused by many
components. Carbon monoxide, for example, competes with oxygen in red blood
cells and interferes with the blood’s ability to deliver life giving oxygen to
the heart. Nicotine and other toxins in cigarette smoke activate small blood
cells called platelets, which increases the likelihood of blood clots, thereby
affecting blood circulation throughout the body. The researchers criticize the practice of
some scientific consultants who work with the tobacco industry for assuming
that cigarette smoke has the same impact on smokers as it does on non-smokers.
They argue that those scientists are underestimating the damage done by passive
smoking and, in support of their recent findings, cite some previous research
which points to passive smoking as the cause for between 30,000 and 60,000
deaths from heart attacks each year in the United States. This means that
passive smoking is the third most preventable cause of death after active
smoking and alcohol-related diseases.
The study argues that the type of action needed against passive smoking
should be similar to that being taken against illegal drugs and AIDS (SIDA).
The UCSF researchers maintain that the simplest and most cost-effective action
is to establish smoke-free work places, schools and public places.
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