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THE NEWS
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Tobacco
Takes Silent Victims:
America’s Children
Unintended
exposure to secondhand smoke is critical burden on America’s children,
says foundation responsible for effective truth® campaign
WASHINGTON,
DC
– The American Legacy Foundation® announced today in
a new report, Secondhand
Smoke Tearing Families Apart, that children bear a significant
health burden from exposure to secondhand smoke.
Despite increased awareness about the dangers of smoking in recent
years, 46 million adult Americans still smoke.
This widespread use of tobacco is not only having expected
long-term effects on the health of smokers but also more immediate
effects on America ’s children.
Passive
exposure to secondhand smoke, also called environmental tobacco
smoke (ETS), puts young people at risk for serious health consequences,
including low birth weight, sudden infant death syndrome, asthma
and ear infections. While
the health consequences are devastating, the foundation’s report
also details the significant economic costs of treating children
with smoking-related illnesses.
The
foundation found that, in 2001, tobacco’s effects on children included:
- Nearly
300,000 pediatric asthma cases costing the nation more than
$236 million
- More
than 99,000 cases of ear infections costing the nation nearly
$49 million
- More
than 26,000 low birth weight births costing the nation more
than $300 million
- 263
cases of sudden infant death syndrome
“Smokers
know that their addiction is harmful, but they predict that their
smoking will hurt only themselves, and they think that will happen
years down the road,” said the foundation’s President and CEO Cheryl
Healton, Dr. PH. “This research shows us that tobacco isn’t just
killing years down the road. It is killing today, and its silent,
innocent victims are children.”
The
foundation and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) outlined three
immediate steps smokers can take for their children’s health:
·
Make
your home smoke free
·
Keep
your car smoke free
·
Stop
smoking for your children
“Parents
need to stop smoking for their children - not only are children
who live in smoke-filled environments more likely to get sick but
they are also more likely to smoke as an adult than their peers,”
said Dana Best, MD, MPH, FAAP, AAP Committee on Environmental Health.
“An important first step to help parents quit smoking is learning
about the smoking cessation resources in their community. The more
parents know about the process of quitting the more likely parents
are to succeed.”
A
small reduction in tobacco smoke exposure would spare thousands
of children from devastating health problems. In this report the
foundation found that if states were to reduce children’s exposure
to secondhand smoke by one percentage point, the national outlook
would be:
- 2,263
fewer low birth weight births and an associated health care
cost savings of nearly $27 million
- 21
fewer smoking-attributable sudden infant death syndrome deaths
- 19,077
fewer cases of asthma and an associated savings of more than
$15 million
- 6,755
fewer ear infections cases with savings of more than $3 million
The campaign follows Ethan Teicher, a real-life smoker who quit
in front of the cameras for the campaign.
Ethan’s motivation to quit was his family.
“I
made the decision to quit for my family,” Teicher said.
“I want to see my kids grow up, get married, have their own
kids. I don’t want
to cheat them of having a dad around for all of those experiences.
I was fortunate to have the opportunity to share my experience
and hopefully help other fathers to quit -- to have more time with
their families.”
The
foundation’s report also indicates that 43,000 children are orphaned
each year because of smoking related deaths.
The
American Legacy Foundation is dedicated to building a world where
young people reject tobacco and anyone can quit. Located in Washington,
DC, the foundation develops programs that address the health effects
of tobacco use through grants, technical assistance and training,
youth activism, strategic partnerships, counter-marketing and grass
roots marketing campaigns, public relations, and outreach to populations
disproportionately affected by the toll of tobacco.
The American Legacy Foundation was created as a result of
the November 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) reached between
attorneys general from 46 states and the tobacco industry.
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