Going Smoke-free: The Medical Case for Clean Air in the Home, at Work and in Public Places |
Contents
what it is and why it is harmful | 1 |
Health effects of environmental tobacco smoke | 13 |
2 | 24 |
Exposure by age sex and socioeconomic status | 29 |
Deaths from exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in the | 43 |
workplace | 51 |
6 | 60 |
The impact of partial and complete smokefree policies on | 79 |
Public attitudes to smokefree policy | 103 |
Legislating to prevent exposure to environmental tobacco | 115 |
Economics of smokefree policies | 129 |
Economics of smokefree policies and the hospitality industry | 145 |
Tobacco industry responses and approaches to smokefree | 155 |
how was it achieved | 185 |
Key conclusions and recommendations | 197 |
The legal perspective on work and leisure exposure | 89 |
Common terms and phrases
active smoking adults air quality areas argument asthma benefits carcinogens caused Chapter cigarettes smoked completely smoke-free comprehensive smoke-free policies COPD costs cotinine concentrations cotinine levels deaths Department of Health Effects of smoke-free employers environment environmental tobacco smoke Epidemiol estimates ethical ETS exposure evidence exposed exposure to environmental exposure to ETS exposure to passive exposure to tobacco Geometric mean harm Health and Safety health effects hospitality industry households implementation increased introduction of smoke-free Ireland ischaemic heart disease Jarvis MJ London lung cancer ng/ml nicotine non-smokers nuisance Office for National parental smoking passive smoking population protect Public Health Research respiratory restaurants restrictions on smoking saliva cotinine secondhand smoke smoke-free laws smoke-free legislation smoke-free public places smoke-free restaurants smoke-free workplaces smoking ban smoking cessation smoking in public smoking prevalence smoking restrictions smoking-related studies support for smoke-free Tob Control Tobacco Control tobacco industry ventilation venues
Popular passages
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