Researchers Call For Smokefree Outdoor Areas - British Medical Journal

Main Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 12 Dec 2008 - 2:00 PDT

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Many outside public spaces should be smokefree to help stop children becoming smokers, say researchers in an article published on bmj.com today.

George Thomson and colleagues argue that outdoor bans in parks, car parks, beaches, and streets will reduce smoking being modelled to children as normal behaviour and thus cut the uptake of smoking.

The need for outdoor smoking restrictions is increasingly recognised, they write. For example, California has banned smoking within 25 feet of outdoor playgrounds, while several reports from around the world show majority support for restricting or banning smoking in outdoor areas where there are children.

The authors acknowledge that we may not yet be certain that outdoor smoke-free areas reduce smoking uptake. However, they believe that society has an ethical duty to minimise the risk of children becoming nicotine dependent smokers. "Children need smoke-free outdoor places now, to help normalise a smoke-free society", they conclude.

But Professor Simon Chapman from the University of Sydney, argues that outdoor bans infringe personal freedom and that evidence for extending bans to outdoor settings is flimsy.

He points out that there are few differences between the chemistry of tobacco smoke and that generated by campfires or barbecues. Zero tolerance of tobacco smoke in outdoor public settings is nakedly paternalistic, he writes.

"Should smoking in outside public spaces be banned?
George Thomson, Nick Wilson, Richard Edwards, Alistair Woodward
BMJ 2008;337:a2806

The British Medical Journal (BMJ)

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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