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In the home
- Don't smoke in your house or permit others to do so.
- If a family member insists on smoking indoors, increase ventilation in
the area where smoking takes place. Open windows or use exhaust fans.
- Do not smoke if children are present, particularly infants and toddlers.
They are particularly susceptible to the effects of passive smoking.
- Don't allow baby-sitters or others who work in your home to smoke in the
house or near your children.
Where children spend time
EPA recommends that every organization dealing with children have a smoking
policy that effectively protects children from exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke.
- Find out about the smoking policies of the day care providers, pre-schools,
schools, and other care-givers for your children.
- Help other parents understand the serious health risks to children from
secondhand smoke. Work with parent/teacher associations, your school board
and school administrators, community leaders, and other concerned citizens
to make your child's environment smoke free.
In the workplace
EPA recommends that every company have a smoking policy that effectively protects
nonsmokers from involuntary exposure to tobacco smoke. Many businesses and
organizations already have smoking policies in place but these policies vary
in their effectiveness.
- If your company does not have a smoking policy that effectively controls
secondhand smoke, work with appropriate management and labor organizations
to establish one.
- Simply separating smokers and nonsmokers within the same area, such as
a cafeteria, may reduce exposure, but nonsmokers will still be exposed to
recirculated smoke or smoke drifting into nonsmoking areas.
- Prohibiting smoking indoors or limiting smoking to rooms that have been
specially designed to prevent smoke from escaping to other area of the building
are two options that will effectively protect nonsmokers. The costs associated
with establishing properly designated smoking rooms vary from building to
building, and are likely to be greater than simply eliminating smoking entirely.
If smoking is permitted indoors, it should be in a room that meets several
conditions:
- Air from the smoking room should be directly exhausted to the outside by
an exhaust fan. Air from the smoking room should not be recirculated to other
parts of the building. More air should be exhausted from the room than is
supplied to it to make sure ETS doesn't drift to surrounding spaces.
- The ventilation system should provide the smoking room with 60 cubic feet
per minute (CFM) of supply air per smoker. This air is often supplied by
air transferred from other parts of the building, such as corridors.
- Nonsmokers should not have to use the smoking room for any purpose. It
should be located in a non-work area where no one, as part of his or her
work responsibilities, is required to enter.
- Employer-supported smoking cessation programs are an important part of
any smoking policy. Approximately 25 percent of American adults still smoke.
Many smokers would like to quit, but cigarette smoking is physically and
psychologically addictive, and quitting is not easy. While working in a smoke-free
building may encourage some smokers to quit, a goal of any smoking policy
should be to actively support smokers who want to kick the habit.
- If there are designated outdoor smoking areas, smoking should not be permitted
right outside the doors (or near building ventilation system air intakes)
where nonsmokers may have to pass through smoke from smokers congregated
near doorways. Some employers have set up outdoor areas equipped with shelters
and ashtrays to accommodate smokers.
In restaurants and bars
- Know the law concerning smoking in your community. Some communities have
banned smoking in places such as restaurants entirely. Others require separate
smoking areas in restaurants, although most rely on simply separating smokers
and nonsmokers within the same space, which may reduce but not eliminate
involuntary exposure to ETS.
- If smoking is permitted, placement of smoking areas should be determined
with some knowledge of the ventilation characteristics of the space to minimize
nonsmoker exposure. For example, nonsmoking areas should be near air supply
ducts while smoking areas should be near return registers or exhausts.
- Ask to be seated in nonsmoking areas as far from smokers as possible.
- If your community does not have a smoking control ordinance, urge that
one be enacted. If your local ordinances are not sufficiently protective,
urge your local government officials to take action.
- Few restrictions have been imposed in bars where drinking and smoking seem
to go together. In the absence of state or local laws restricting smoking
in bars, encourage the proprietor to consider his or her nonsmoking clientele,
and frequent places that do so.
In other indoor spaces
Does your state or community have laws addressing smoking in public spaces?
Many states have laws prohibiting smoking in public facilities such as schools,
hospitals, airports, bus terminals, and other public buildings. Know the law.
Take advantage of laws designed to protect you. Federal laws now prohibit smoking
on all airline flights of six hours or less within the U.S. and on all interstate
bus travel.
Created by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Review Date: 5/16/2007
Reviewed By: Alan Greene, M.D., F.A.A.P., Department of Pediatrics, Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University School of Medicine; Chief Medical Officer, A.D.A.M., Inc.
The information provided herein should not be used during any medical emergency or for the diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. A licensed medical professional should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions. Call 911 for all medical emergencies. Links to other sites are provided for information only -- they do not constitute endorsements of those other sites. © 1997-
A.D.A.M., Inc. Any duplication or distribution of the information contained herein is strictly prohibited.
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