In the first study to evaluate the health risks of exposure to
secondhand smoke for patrons of restaurants and bars, researchers have
found that the risks are well above the acceptable level. The study
assessed the risk for lung cancer and heart disease deaths among both
patrons and servers and also for asthma initiation—the first study to do
so—among servers.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists Lara Gundel and
Michael Apte contributed to the study, which was led by Ruiling Liu and
Katharine Hammond from UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health. The
results were published in the journal Tobacco Control in a
paper titled, “Assessment of risk for asthma initiation and cancer and
heart disease deaths among patrons and servers due to secondhand smoke
exposure in restaurants and bars.”
Taking
exposure data from 65 restaurants and bars in Minnesota over an
eight-month period in 2007, the researchers found that the lifetime
excess risk of lung cancer death was 18 in a million for patrons
visiting only nonsmoking sections and 80 in a million for patrons in the
smoking section. For servers, the lifetime excess risk was 802 in a
million for lung cancer death.
Extrapolating to the entire country, the researchers estimate that
the lifetime excess risk for the general nonsmoking population due to
exposure to secondhand smoke in restaurants and bars would result in 214
additional lung cancer deaths and 3,001 additional heart disease deaths
per year.
“One in a million is significant,” said Gundel. “You can’t control
people smoking, but to support tobacco-free policies we need to know how
to protect people.”
Although smoking bans have been enacted in many parts of the country,
one quarter of the U.S. population remains unprotected by smoke-free
policies in restaurants and 35 percent in bars, according to the study.
Globally 95 percent of the population is unprotected by smoke-free
policies in restaurants and bars. Moreover tobacco companies continue to
fight smoking bans, and increasing numbers of cities are repealing or
weakening them.
While previous studies have examined health risks for people working
in restaurants and bars, none had quantified risks to patrons. In the
U.S. 66 percent of adults eat out at least weekly, and for nonsmokers
restaurants and bars may be their predominant source of secondhand smoke
exposure. The researchers assumed weekly visits to restaurants for 60
years.
This was also the first study to look at servers’ risk of asthma
initiation due to secondhand smoke exposure. They estimated the risks to
correspond to 1,420 new asthma cases per year among nonsmoking servers
in the United States.
“There are huge economic impacts related to smoking,” Gundel said.
“It’s worth it to society to try to minimize the damage from smoking.”
No comments:
Post a Comment