What is passive smoking? Is it harmful?

Passive smoking occurs when someone who is not smoking breathes in tobacco smoke, such as cigarette smoke. It is also known as secondhand smoke.

Passive smoking is a combination of the smoke produced from the lit end of a cigarette (or other combusted tobacco product) and the smoke exhaled by smokers. Public health authorities have concluded that secondhand smoke from burning tobacco causes diseases, including lung cancer and heart disease, in nonsmoking adults, as well as conditions in children such as asthma, respiratory infections, cough, wheezing, otitis media (middle ear infection), and sudden infant death syndrome. In addition, public health officials have concluded that secondhand smoke can exacerbate adult asthma and cause eye, throat, and nasal irritation.  People should be informed about these conclusions and guided by them in deciding whether to be in places where secondhand smoke is present or, if they are smokers, when and where to smoke around others. Smokers should not smoke around children or pregnant women.

Are passive smoking and secondhand smoking the same thing?

Yes, in general passive smoking and secondhand smoking refer to the same thing.

How to create a smoke—free environment?

If you are an adult smoker, here are some tips on how to create a smoke—free environment:

•    Quit smoking entirely. The best way to eliminate secondhand smoke is to quit smoking. This is of course the best course of action for any smoker. Smokers should not smoke around children or pregnant women.
•    Make the house smoke—free. It’s not enough to just open a window or door, or smoke in another room of the house. Smoke can linger in the air after you’ve had a cigarette. People should be guided by public health authorities’ conclusions in deciding whether to be in places where secondhand smoke is present or, if they are smokers, when and where to smoke around others.
•    Make the vehicle smoke—free. Similar to smoking in the house, the car is another enclosed space best left smoke—free. Having the windows down in a car will not make a big difference, as smoke can cling to the car seats and linger in the air. People should be guided by public health authorities’ conclusions in deciding whether to be in places where secondhand smoke is present or, if they are smokers, when and where to smoke around others.
•    Respect smoke—free zones. Be aware before you light up a cigarette and observe the area around you carefully — especially if you are traveling and unfamiliar with local laws and customs.

Is heated tobacco vapor harmful to non—smokers?

The best decision any smoker can make is to quit tobacco and nicotine use altogether. For adult smokers who would otherwise continue to smoke or use nicotine products, there are many smoke—free alternatives on the market today, and a heated tobacco product is one option that is available. In general, heated tobacco products do not produce smoke as they do not burn tobacco, but rather, they heat tobacco to create a vapor.

With that in mind, many wonder if heated tobacco products produce secondhand smoke. In general, heated tobacco products should not burn tobacco or generate tobacco smoke and therefore have the potential to emit significantly fewer and lower levels of harmful and potentially harmful chemicals compared to cigarette smoke. The lack of combustion and the reduction in formation of harmful chemicals should be substantiated on a product—by—product basis. Importantly, this does not mean that smoke—free products including heated tobacco products are risk free.

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This article is for general information and educational purposes. Some of the information in this article is based on external, third—party sources and we make no representations or warranties of any kind regarding the accuracy, validity or completeness of such information.

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