02/03/2005

Passive smoking kills 30 a day in UK, claims study

Passive smoking kills at least 30 people every day, both at work and at home, in the UK, a study in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has claimed.

Research conducted by Professor Konrad Jamrozik from the University of Queensland showed that passive smoking is likely to be responsible for the deaths of 617 workers in the UK each year. The research also claimed that 54 deaths in the hospitality industry are attributable to second-hand smoke every year.

Professor Jamrozik suggested that exposure to second-hand smoke in work could contribute to as many as a fifth of all deaths from passive smoking in people aged between 20-64 and up to half of such deaths in employees in the hospitality industry.

Passive smoking at home might also account for a further 2,700 deaths in people aged between 20-64, the research found, as well as a further 8,000 deaths per year among the over-65s, mainly from strokes and heart disease.

Professor Jamrozik said that several thousand premature deaths in the UK could be prevented by the introduction of a smoking ban in all workplaces as well as reductions in the general prevalence of active smoking.

The government's White Paper on Public Health, published last November, included proposals for a smoking ban in public places, although pubs, which do not serve food, would be exempt from the ban. However, there have criticisms that this ban would not be enough.

The British Medical Association (BMA), the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and the Joint Consultants Committee have all announced their intention to support the city of Liverpool in its' bid to introduce a complete ban in all workplaces.

The private bill is due to face its' second reading in the House of Lords on March 11.

Chairman of the BMA, James Johnson, said: "With the latest figures in this BMJ paper revealing that second-hand smoke at work kills more than 600 non-smokers every year in the UK, I don't know how John Reid can continue to serve the public half-measures on health. We need a total ban and we need it now."

Sylvia Denton, President of the RCN, added: "No one is denying a smoker rights, but as nurses we have to be advocates for everyone's health. Introducing smokefree measures is an effective way to save lives."

(KMcA/SP)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

27 October 2005
Government to introduce partial smoking ban
The government has announced plans to introduce a partial smoking ban, following reports of a Cabinet row over the proposals. The plans, introduced as part of the Health Improvement Bill, will see smoking banned in all public places in England, but there will be exemptions for pubs, which do not serve food and private members clubs.
19 February 2009
Teens Hold The Key To Quitting, Ad Campaign Says
A hard-hitting new Smokefree campaign - 'Worried' - launches today. The ads, aimed at parents who smoke, communicate an uncomfortable message to viewers - that teenage children worry about their parents' future due to the harmful health effects of smoking.
31 May 2005
Stop smoking help services to be extended
The government has announced plans to increase NHS Stop Smoking Services, so that people can access them from supermarkets and pubs as well as healthcare facilities.
28 April 2005
BMA reinforces call for UK-wide smoking ban
The British Medical Association (BMA) has reinforced its call for a UK-wide ban on smoking in public places, with the publication of a report which, it claims, will “counter the myths” generated by opponents to the ban.
12 November 2003
NHS to offer free nicotine gum to smokers
Products such as nicotine patches and gum will be given to the NHS for free under a new deal to help at least 10,000 more smokers quit. Agreements between the government and the major suppliers of smoking cessation products will give all Primary Care Trusts additional support from these suppliers, including free nicotine patches.