From
Globalink 5/9/07
Heart
attacks tumble after Irish smoking ban
By Ben Hirschler (Reuters) Vienna, September 4, 2007
Ireland's rate of heart attacks fell by around a tenth in the year following the
introduction of the world's first nationwide ban on workplace smoking, boosting
the case for more similar bans, doctors said on Tuesday.
Edmond Cronin and colleagues at Cork University Hospital said an analysis of
people admitted with heart attacks to public hospitals in southwest Ireland
showed an 11 percent fall in the year after the ban came into effect in March
2004.
"This should further encourage health authorities to look at more smoking
bans around the world," he said in an interview at the annual European
Society of Cardiology congress, where the data was presented.
There was no significant change in heart attacks in the second year after the
ban, indicating a possible step change in medical outcomes.
Smoking, which leads to heart disease as well as lung cancer and other serious
respiratory conditions, is the leading cause of preventable deaths worldwide.
It increases the risk of heart problems like angina, heart failure and heart
attacks by contributing to the build-up of cholesterol plaques of the artery
walls, leading to narrowing or blockage.
More recent research also suggests that inhaling tobacco smoke, either directly
or passively, can trigger a heart attack.
The World Health Organisation called in May for a global ban on smoking at work
and in enclosed public places, arguing there was no safe level of exposure to
second-hand tobacco smoke.
The International Union against Cancer estimates that recent anti-smoking
legislation in some European countries and parts of Australia, Canada and the
United States now means that around 240 million people worldwide are protected
by smoke-free rules.
But that is still less than 4 percent of the world population.
Worryingly, other research presented at this week's cardiology congress showed
that while the dangers of smoking are becoming ever more clear, one in five
patients diagnosed with heart disease still continues to smoke.