Bars Prosper And Staff Are Healthier Following The Smoking Ban, UK
Main Category: Smoking / Quit SmokingAlso Included In: Respiratory / Asthma
Article Date: 02 Oct 2007 - 1:00 PDT
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When the smokefree legislation was introduced in July, eradicating the tobacco haze that had hung over England's pubs and clubs for a more than a century, sceptics argued the only impact would be to drive down bar takings.
Three months later the first survey of the effect of the legislation has revealed dramatic improvements in air quality and a boost to trade. Smokefree premises have been good for both health and business.
Researchers from the Tobacco Control Collaborating Centre in Warwick visited 59 establishments around the country in June and again in August, including bars, pubs, clubs, bingo halls, betting shops and cafes. They found staff exposed to harmful levels of secondhand smoke had fallen by 95 per cent.
"Small particles" in the air from cigarette smoke fell from near-hazardous levels in June to levels similar to the outside air in August and staff had four times less cotinine in their blood, a by product of nicotine.
The researchers calculated that on average the exposure of staff had dropped from the equivalent of smoking 190 cigarettes a year to 44 cigarettes after the ban was introduced.
In each business, the owner, four employees and four customers were interviewed and their attitude and behaviour towards the new law assessed.
Hilary Wareing, a co-director of the Tobacco Control Collaborating Centre, said: "This study proves that smokefree workplaces are helping to improve the health of the nation's hospitality workers."
Businesses have also prospered since the law change. In June, more than half of the owners said the change would damage their trade. In August, 70 per cent said there had been a positive impact or it had made no difference.
Elspeth Lee, the senior tobacco control manager at Cancer Research UK, which funded the study to be presented to the National Cancer Research Institute conference in Birmingham today, said: "We won't see a reduction in cancer rates for some years to come but the short-term health gains we have seen are very encouraging. As one of the largest countries in the world to adopt smokefree legislation to date, we hope these results will demonstrate to other nations that this legislation has almost immediate health benefits."
http://www.ash.org.uk
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Truly Clean Air Please!
posted by Bill Hannegan on 3 Oct 2007 at 1:42 pmIf the secondhand smoke problem in pubs had been dealt with by requiring all pubs that allow indoor smoking to intensively filtrate their air, then a great number of public health threats such as radon, avian flu and tuberculosis would be stripped from the air along with the tobacco smoke. The failure to push for such truly clean air in pubs seems like bad public health policy and should be questioned by journalists.
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