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Smoky Bars versus City Streets
TRENTON, NJ (AP) - Which is more harmful to your health - a smoky bar or a city
street filled with diesel truck fumes? Well, you might want to skip your next
happy hour.
Smoky bars and casinos have up to 50 times more cancer-causing particles
in the air than highways and city streets clogged with diesel trucks at rush
hour, according
to a study that also shows indoor air pollution virtually disappears once smoking
is banned.
Conducted by the researcher who first showed secondhand smoke causes thousands
of U.S. lung cancer deaths each year, the study found casino and bar workers
are exposed to particulate pollution at far greater levels than the government
allows outdoors.
“This paper will help localities pass smoking bans,” predicted the
author, James Repace, a biophysicist who works as a secondhand-smoke consultant
after spending 30 years as a federal researcher. “It shows how beneficial
smoking bans are for hospitality workers and patrons.”
Repace tested air in a casino, a pool hall and six taverns in Delaware in
November 2002 and in January 2003, two months after the state imposed a strict
indoor
smoking ban.
His detectors measured two substances blamed for tobacco-related cancers:
a group of chemicals called particulate polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or
PPAHs, and
respirable particles - airborne soot small enough to penetrate the lungs.
“They are the most dangerous substances in secondhand smoke,” said
Repace, a visiting assistant clinical professor at Tufts University School
of Medicine in Boston.
Repace said his research also showed that ventilation systems - sometimes
touted by tavern, restaurant and casino groups as an alternative to smoking
bans -
cannot exchange air fast enough to keep up with the smoke.
The study, published in the September issue of the Journal of Occupational
and Environmental Medicine, was partly funded by the nation’s largest
philanthropic organization devoted to health care, the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation of Plainsboro,
New Jersey.
Repace found an average level of respirable particles of 231 micrograms,
or millionths of a gram, per cubic meter of air in the eight nightspots in
Delaware.
That is
15 times the 15-microgram Environmental Protection Agency limit for outdoor
air, and 49 times the rush-hour average on Interstate 95 in Wilmington. It
even tops
the 199-microgram rush-hour level at the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel tollbooths.
The eight indoor places had an average PPAH level of 134 nanograms, or billionths
of a gram, per cubic meter - five times the level in the air outside. By comparison,
the average rush-hour levels of PPAHs on Interstate 95 in Wilmington and in
Boston’s
Roxbury neighborhood, heavily polluted by diesel and truck emissions, were
7 and 18 nanograms, respectively.
After the smoking ban took effect, levels of both cancer-causing substances
dropped 90 percent or more in all of the indoor places tested, with the air
quality nearly
indistinguishable from outside air.
“It demonstrates really clearly that a smoking ban results in a massive
improvement in air quality,” said Dr. Jonathan Foulds, director of the
tobacco dependence program at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey’s
School of Public Health. “Here in New Jersey, and in many other states
that don’t have an indoor smoking ban, this should be used to put pressure
on the legislators.”
Timothy Buckley, associate professor of environmental health science at Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, said other research
has shown dramatic air quality improvement after smoking was banned in workplaces,
but this appears to be the first study in bars or casinos.
The magnitude of
that effect is striking,” Buckley said.
As of July 1, a total of 727 U.S. municipalities had some smoking restrictions,
with 312 banning smoking even in bars and restaurants, according to the nonprofit
American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation.
Delaware, New York and Massachusetts prohibit smoking in all workplaces,
restaurants and bars. California and Connecticut have similar bans, but with
exemptions
for workplaces with five or fewer employees.
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