USA: Study Finds That Heart Attacks In Non-smokers Decreased With Smoking Ban
Main Category: Smoking / Quit SmokingArticle Date: 19 Nov 2007 - 15:00 PST
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People with no risk factors for heart disease can still experience heart attacks. An Indiana University study found that after a countywide smoking ban was implemented, hospital admissions for heart attacks dropped 70 percent for non-smokers, but not for smokers.
Dong-Chul Seo, lead author and assistant professor in IU Bloomington's Department of Applied Health Science said, "Heart attack admissions for smokers saw no similar decline during the study, so the benefits of the ban appear to come more from the reduced exposure to secondhand smoke among non-smokers than from reduced consumption of tobacco among smokers."
The study, was the first to examine the effect of public smoking bans on heart attacks in non-smokers. Previous studies did not distinguish between non-smokers and smokers when examining the effect of the bans or specifically look at non-smokers who had no risk factors for heart disease, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol or previous heart surgery.
Seo said, "What concerns us is the fact that about half of all non-smoking Americans are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke, even though more than 500 municipalities nationwide have adopted some form of a smoking ban in public places."
Delaware County had no smoking bans during the study period, while Monroe County prohibited smoking in restaurants, bars, retail spaces and workplaces.
Researchers examined hospital admissions for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in Monroe County, Ind., and Delaware County, Ind., which are comparable in a number of ways, including population, presence of a college community, median income, racial/ethnic diversity and heart disease death rates.
The study compared the two counties in addition to analysing the 35,482 hospital admissions in Monroe county 22 months before and 22 months after the initial smoking ban was adopted. In Monroe County, there was a 70 percent drop in the number of hospital admissions for AMI among non-smoking patients with no history of heart disease, compared to an 11 percent drop in Delaware County. This translates into a 59 percent net decrease in the number of non-smoking patient admissions for heart attacks after the Monroe County public smoking ban was enforced.
The study was supported by the American Institutes for Research and Indiana Tobacco Prevention and Cessation.
http://www.ash.org.uk
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Numbers Please
posted by Bill Elliot on 26 Nov 2007 at 9:34 amHow hard is it to publish the actual numbers of MI's? 35 thousand hospital admissions exaggerates the size of the study the same way leaving out before-after numbers of MI's suggests a too-small-for-relevance study. 22 months is certainly more relevant than the five month time frame of the Helena Montana study which, though perhaps suggestive of some connection between second hand smoke and MI, was far from conclusive. Larger studies, in the UK for example, show such a connection but margins of error in smaller studies need to be acknowledged in order to avoid the specter of intentionally misleading a public so hungry for information...accuracy through full disclosure matters.
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