Banning smoking in
public places has helped to cut premature births by 10 percent,
according to new research from the United States and Europe.
A
study in The Lancet medical journal found that while the impact of
anti-smoking laws varies between countries, the overall effect on child
health around the world is positive.
"Our research shows that
smoking bans are an effective way to protect the health of our
children," said Jasper Been of the University of Edinburghs Centre for
Population Health Sciences, who led the study.
He said the
findings should help to accelerate the introduction of anti-smoking
legislation in cities, countries and districts which have yet to do so.
Laws
banning smoking in public places such as bars, restaurants, offices and
other workplaces have already been proven in previous studies to
protect adults from the health threats associated with passive smoking.
According
to the World Health Organisation (WHO), tobacco already kills around 6
million people a year worldwide, including more than 600,000 non-smokers
who die from exposure to second-hand smoke. By 2030, if current trends
continue, it predicts tobaccos death toll could be 8 million people a
year.
Only 16 percent of the worlds population is covered by
comprehensive smoke-free laws, and 40 percent children worldwide are
regularly exposed to second-hand smoke, the WHO says.
Public
health experts hope that as more and more countries in Europe and around
the world adopt stricter legislation on smoking in public places, the
health benefits will swiftly start to become evident.
Fridays
research in The Lancet, which analysed data on more than 2.5 million
births and almost 250,000 hospital attendances for asthma attacks, was
the first comprehensive study to look at how anti-smoking laws affect
childrens health.
With results from five North American studies
of local bans and six European studies on national bans, it found rates
of both pre-term births and hospital attendance for asthma fell by 10
percent within a year of smoke-free laws coming into effect.
"Together
with the known health benefits in adults, our study provides clear
evidence that smoking bans have considerable public health benefits for
perinatal and child health," said Been.
He said it also provided "strong support for WHO recommendations to create smoke-free public environments on a national level."
Source : Antara
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