Health effects of Second-hand smoke in Europe
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Second-hand smoke
About second-hand smoke
Second-hand smoke (SHS; also called environmental tobacco smoke or passive smoking) is a known human carcinogen (IARC, 2004). Exposure to SHS has been shown to cause lung cancer, IHD (ischemic heart disease) sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, lower respiratory infections in young children, low birth weight, reduced pulmonary function among children, acute otitis media, and acute irritant symptoms (WHO, 1999; Californian EPA 2005; US Surgeon General 2006; IARC 2004, Jaakkola et al. 2003). Most evidence for SHS-related impacts is fairly consistent.
SHS has been selected in our study because of its high public health impact, public concern and political interest. Policy measures to (further) reduce SHS exposure have been implemented in the recent past (e.g. the smoking ban) and further policy actions may be taken in the future.
Selected health endpoints and exposure-response functions
Out of the large number of health endpoints that SHS is associated with, we selected mortality and morbidity due to lung cancer and ischemic heart disease (IHD), morbidity due to onset of asthma (both in children and in adults), lower respiratory infections and acute otitis media. For the other health endpoints mentioned above, strong evidence is available, but the necessary disease statistics were lacking.
For the SHS-related burden of disease calculations, we have followed the recent WHO methods on the global estimation of disease burden from SHS (Öberg et al. 2010). A summary of outcomes with their respective evidence levels is provided in Table 3-5. The exposure response functions are presented in Table 3-19.
The selected exposure-response values are not gender-specific (e.g. exposure to male or female smoking spouse; exposure to paternal or maternal smoking). Instead, we used the mean relative risk for exposure to adults’ smoking. This choice was made in order to limit the sensitivity to gender-specific changes in smoking habits over time and across countries, and because not all exposure data were provided separately for men and women.
The selected outcomes are being applied only to non-smokers, i.e. to the non-smoking disease burden. To that effect, the disease burden due to active smoking has been deduced from the total disease burden, by country (based on total disease burden and active smoking disease burden by country provided by WHO; update 2002 based on Ezzati et al. (2004)).
Health endpoint | Description | Conclusion regarding the level of evidence (in 3 reports) | ||||||||
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