Apartment Dwellers More Likely to
Smoke: CDC
Apartment residents
are more likely to smoke and less likely to have smoke-free rules than people
living in single-family homes, U.S. health officials report. Researchers from
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 20 percent of
adults living in apartments or condos smoked, potentially exposing nearby
residents to secondhand smoke.
Among residents of
single-family homes, however, only about 14 percent smoked.
Also, smoke-free
rules prevailed in 81 percent of multi-unit housing units versus 87 percent of
single-family homes, the study found. "These findings show the importance
of protecting all people who live in multi-unit housing through smoke-free
building policies and access to tobacco cessation resources," said Dr.
Corinne Graffunder, director of CDC's Office on Smoking and Health.
"Smoke-free
rules help reduce secondhand smoke exposure among nonsmokers, prevent smoking
initiation among youth and adults, support tobacco cessation among current
smokers, and reduce the social acceptability of smoking," she said in an
agency news release. The CDC reports that exposure to secondhand smoke results
in 41,000 deaths among nonsmoking adults each year. For the study, researchers
analyzed data from the 2013-1014 National Adult Tobacco Survey. Use of any
tobacco products was reported by one-quarter of apartment dwellers and less
than 20 percent of people from single-family residences.
And close to 10
percent of multi-unit housing residents reported secondhand smoke entered their
homes regularly, the study showed. Exposure to secondhand smoke from nearby
apartments or common living spaces remained an issue for one-third of
multi-unit housing residents who have smoke-free rules at home, the CDC found. Tobacco
use in multi-unit housing was highest among black men between 45 and 64 years
old. It was also higher among single, gay or bisexual people, residents of the
Midwest, those with a high school diploma but no college degree and people
making less than $20,000 annually, the researchers said.
"The Surgeon
General has concluded there is no safe level of exposure to secondhand
smoke," said study co-author Brian King, deputy director of research
translation in the CDC's Office on Smoking and Health. "Opening windows or
using ventilation systems does not effectively eliminate secondhand smoke
exposure in multi-unit housing."
The study was published July 13 in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
Source: www.medlineplus.gov
25.07.2016
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