Smoking
bans are boon for public health, WHO says
06.29.08, 10:56 AM ET
LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Smoking bans are an effective way
of preventing heart
disease, getting cigarette users to quit and protecting children
from second-hand smoke, a World Health Organisation (WHO) report issued on
Monday said.
The
report by scientists at the WHO's International Agency for Cancer Research
urged more countries to adopt smoking bans in public and at the workplace,
saying there was enough evidence to prove they work, without hurting
businesses such as restaurants and bars.
"Implementation
of such policies can have a broader population effect of increasing smoke-free
environments," the researchers wrote in the Lancet Oncology special
report.
"Not
only do these policies achieve their aim of protecting the health of
non-smokers by decreasing exposure to second-hand smoke, they also have many
effects on smoking behaviour, which compound the health
benefits."
Many
local and national governments, mainly in Western nations, have enacted
varying types of smoking bans in recent years to protect people from
second-hand smoke.
A
separate report issued by Cancer Research UK on Monday found England's ban
adopted a year ago has spurred more smokers than ever to kick the habit, and
predicted the restrictions would prevent 40,000 deaths over the next 10 years.
The
researchers involved in the WHO report -- who included John Pierce of the
University of California, San
Diego, and Maria Leon at the International Agency for Cancer
Research --- reviewed more than 900 studies and government reports looking at
the impact of smoking bans across the world.
They
cited studies that suggest smoke-free workplaces have lead to a 10 to 20
percent decrease in hospital admissions for heart disease a year after a
smoking ban.
The
WHO says smoking kills about four million people each year, causing a quarter
of deaths related to heart disease.
(Reporting
by Michael Kahn; Editing by Caroline Drees)
"However, it's the dose that makes the poison and although second-hand smoke may increase people's exposure to carcinogens, the concentration of particles is usually very small.
"A good ventilation system can reduce it even further.
"A lot of people may find a smoky environment unpleasant but that doesn't justify a ban on smoking in every pub, club and bar in the country.
"People, including bar workers, should be given a choice of working or socialising in a smoke-free environment or a well-ventilated, designated smoking lounge.
"This feeble report won't change our opinion."