Stanford Dunham about 1988 |
Driving to Kalispell, Montana for vacations (where our parents were from) was torture for me because of the cigarette smoke.
My dad was the worst, and he started smoking when he was
about 12. He smoked for years until his health deteriorated. He smoked about
50 years.
Mom stopped smoking years earlier than that. She stopped
smoking in her late 30’s and she remarried. After that she was so health conscious. Mom and my stepfather Karl exuded health.
However, Mom smoked when she was pregnant with
me. She didn't smoke when she was pregnant with my three older brothers. I was born in 1961 before the landmark
report published on January 11, 1964 by the Surgeon General's Advisory
Committee on Smoking and Health.
I had pneumonia several times before I was 6, and croup was always
a worry. I had major earaches for years. Even now I worry about pneumonia and bronchitis.
As an adult, I have had many bouts of pneumonia and bronchitis.
Perhaps the damage to my system when I was a child was so
severe, it might have been part of the causes of my strokes. Who knows? I have thought about that sometimes though I would never
blame my parents. I can't blame them. They didn't know. I didn't know.
They were great people. But, this new study makes me wonder
about my health and my strokes. People should never smoke, and kids should
never be exposed.
The Children’s Medical Center in Dallas just released a
study called “Passive
Smoking
Causes
Irreversible Damage
to
Children's Arteries.”
This is a long article but I am going to post this on my blog because it
is important.
Exposure to passive
smoking in childhood causes irreversible damage to the structure of children's
arteries, according to a study published online in the European Heart Journal.
The thickening of the arteries' walls associated with
being exposed to parents' smoke, means that these children will be at greater
risk of heart attacks and strokes in
later life. The researchers from Tasmania, Australia and Finland say that
exposure to both parents smoking in childhood adds an extra 3.3 years to the
age of blood vessels when the children reach adulthood.
The
study is the first to follow children through to adulthood in order to examine
the association between exposure to parental smoking and increased carotid
intima-media thickness (IMT) - a measurement of the thickness of the innermost
two layers of the arterial wall - in adulthood. It adds further strength to the
arguments for banning smoking in areas where children may be present, such as
cars.
The study was made up of 2401 participants in the
Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study, which started in 1980, and 1375
participants in the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which started
in 1985 in Australia. The children were aged between three and 18 at the start
of the studies. The researchers asked questions about parents smoking habits
and they used ultrasound to
measure the thickness of the children's artery walls once they had reached
adulthood.
The
researchers found that carotid IMT in adulthood was 0.015 mm thicker in those
exposed to both parents smoking than in those whose parents did not smoke,
increasing from an average of 0.637 mm to 0.652 mm.
"Our study shows that exposure to passive smoke in
childhood causes a direct and irreversible damage to the structure of the
arteries. Parents, or even those thinking about becoming parents, should quit smoking. This will not only restore their own health
but also protect the health of their children into the future," said Dr
Seana Gall, a research fellow in cardiovascular epidemiology at the Menzies
Research Institute Tasmania and the University of Tasmania.
"While the differences in artery thickness are modest, it is important to consider that they represent the independent effect of a single measure of exposure - that is, whether or not the parents smoked at the start of the studies - some 20 years earlier in a group already at greater risk of heart disease. For example, those with both parents smoking were more likely, as adults, to be smokers or overweight than those whos parents didn't smoke."
The results took account of other factors that could explain the association such as education, the children's smoking habits, physical activity, body mass index, alcohol consumption and biological cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure and cholesterol levels in adulthood.
Interestingly,
the study did not show an effect if only one parent smoked. "We think that
the effect was only apparent with both parents smoking because of the greater
overall dose of smoke these children were exposed to," said Dr Gall.
"We can speculate that the smoking behaviour of someone in a house with a
single adult smoking is different. For example, the parent that smokes might do
so outside away from the family, therefore reducing the level of passive
smoking. However, as we don't have this type of data, this is only a
hypothesis."
Dr
Gall and her colleagues had shown previously that exposure to passive smoking
in childhood reduced the ability of the main artery in the arm to dilate in
response to blood flow in adulthood. This new study adds to the evidence on the
dangers of passive smoking for children.
In
the paper, the authors write: "Together, these studies suggest a direct
and pervasive effect of exposure to environmental cigarette smoke during this
period on both the vascular structure and function in adulthood."
They
continue: "Reducing young people's exposure to tobacco smoke is a public
health priority. Legislation can reduce passive smoke exposure, with
restriction of smoking in public places reducing hospitalizations for
cardiovascular and respiratory disease. Home smoking bans specifically benefit
young people and data from the USA suggest such bans have increased from about
50% in the mid-1990s to 85% in 2006-7, suggesting that exposure to passive
smoke at home is declining.
Unfortunately, these reductions have largely occurred in higher socio-economic groups, meaning socio-economic inequalities in passive smoke exposure remain. Banning smoking in cars where young people are present, which is enforceable and targeting an environment where exposure is high, could reduce these inequalities. Such legislation already exists in Australia, Canada, and USA. Our results support adoption of all measures that protect young people from passive smoke."
In
an accompanying editorial, David Celermajer, Scandrett Professor of Cardiology
at the University of Sydney, Australia, and Dr Edmund Lau, clinical associate
lecturer at the University of Sydney, call on legislators worldwide to do more
to protect children from the harmful effects of tobacco smoke. "Much more
work needs to be done to control the tobacco epidemic and it is up to
legislators backed by the support of clinicians, scientists, and advocates to
end the tobacco epidemic in the 21st century. Today, this is one of our
greatest health care priorities," they write.
Unfortunately, these reductions have largely occurred in higher socio-economic groups, meaning socio-economic inequalities in passive smoke exposure remain. Banning smoking in cars where young people are present, which is enforceable and targeting an environment where exposure is high, could reduce these inequalities. Such legislation already exists in Australia, Canada, and USA. Our results support adoption of all measures that protect young people from passive smoke."
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