USA:
Study Finds That
Heart Attacks In
Non-smokers
Decreased With
Smoking Ban
"What concerns us is the fact that about half of all non-smoking Americans are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke, even though more than 500 municipalities nationwide have adopted some form of a smoking ban in public places."
People with no
risk factors for
heart disease
can still
experience heart
attacks. An
Indiana
University study
found that after
a countywide
smoking ban was
implemented,
hospital
admissions for
heart attacks
dropped 70
percent for
non-smokers, but
not for smokers.
Dong-Chul Seo,
lead author and
assistant
professor in IU
Bloomington's
Department of
Applied Health
Science said,
"Heart attack
admissions for
smokers saw no
similar decline
during the
study, so the
benefits of the
ban appear to
come more from
the reduced
exposure to
secondhand smoke
among
non-smokers than
from reduced
consumption of
tobacco among
smokers."
The study, was
the first to
examine the
effect of public
smoking bans on
heart attacks in
non-smokers.
Previous studies
did not
distinguish
between
non-smokers and
smokers when
examining the
effect of the
bans or
specifically
look at
non-smokers who
had no risk
factors for
heart disease,
such as high
blood pressure,
high cholesterol
or previous
heart surgery.
Seo said, "What
concerns us is
the fact that
about half of
all non-smoking
Americans are
regularly
exposed to
secondhand
smoke, even
though more than
500
municipalities
nationwide have
adopted some
form of a
smoking ban in
public places."
Delaware County
had no smoking
bans during the
study period,
while Monroe
County
prohibited
smoking in
restaurants,
bars, retail
spaces and
workplaces.
Researchers
examined
hospital
admissions for
acute myocardial
infarction (AMI)
in Monroe
County, Ind.,
and Delaware
County, Ind.,
which are
comparable in a
number of ways,
including
population,
presence of a
college
community,
median income,
racial/ethnic
diversity and
heart disease
death rates.
The study
compared the two
counties in
addition to
analyzing the
35,482 hospital
admissions in
Monroe county 22
months before
and 22 months
after the
initial smoking
ban was adopted.
In Monroe
County, there
was a 70 percent
drop in the
number of
hospital
admissions for
AMI among
non-smoking
patients with no
history of heart
disease,
compared to an
11 percent drop
in Delaware
County. This
translates into
a 59 percent net
decrease in the
number of
non-smoking
patient
admissions for
heart attacks
after the Monroe
County public
smoking ban was
enforced.
The study was
supported by the
American
Institutes for
Research and
Indiana Tobacco
Prevention and
Cessation.
Main Category:
Smoking / Quit
Smoking News,
Article Date: 19
Nov 2007 - 15:00
PST
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/89247.php
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