Only one-quarter of smoking parents
adopt a strict smoke-free car policy, and nearly half who don’t enforce
such a ban light up while driving with their children, a new study
indicates.
Interviewing nearly 800 smoking parents,
researchers also found that two out of three parents with strict
smoke-free home policies don’t match that stance in their cars. Nearly
three-quarters of smoking parents admitted that someone had smoked in
their car in the last three months — suggesting parents don’t recognise
the dangers of exposing their kids to tobacco residue in such a confined
space.
“We’ve seen that a high number of
parents don’t smoke in their homes and expected the same kind of
[behaviour] in cars, so we were shocked and surprised,” said study
author Dr. Emara Nabi-Burza, a senior clinical research coordinator at
the Center for Child and Adolescent Health Research and Policy at
Massachusetts General Hospital for Children in Boston.
“For some reason, the car isn’t
considered an environment where children can be exposed to tobacco
smoke,” she added. “Parents think putting down the windows is fine. They
don’t think of it as an indoor exposure for children, which is where we
need to step in and make people aware.”
The study is published online Nov. 12 in the journal Paediatrics in advance of publication in the December print issue.
No safe level of tobacco smoke exposure
exists, according to the United States Surgeon General, and research has
shown that it contributes to a worsening of asthma symptoms in children
and greater odds of respiratory infections, sudden infant death
syndrome and ear infections. In children aged 18 months or younger,
exposure to so-called secondhand smoke is responsible for up to 15,000
hospitalisations in the United States each year, the study said.
Nabi-Burza and her colleagues,
interviewing parent smokers as they exited paediatricians’ offices in
eight states, learned that 48 per cent of those without a strictly
enforced smoke-free car policy smoked while driving with their children.
College-educated parents of children under one year were more likely to
enforce such a policy, as were those who smoked 10 or fewer cigarettes
per day.
Only 12 per cent said they had been advised by their children’s doctors to have a smoke-free car.
“Mostly we see when paediatricians talk
to parents, it’s about smoke-free homes,” Nabi-Burza said. “Even bars
are smoke-free, but cars have been kind of forgotten. Now that we know
the extent of the problem, paediatricians should talk to parents about
how smoking in cars is not good for children.”
Danny McGoldrick, vice president of
research at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids in Washington, D.C.,
noted that even tobacco smoke residue so-called “thirdhand smoke” in
cars can be harmful to children, increasing the importance of smoke-free
car policies even if youngsters aren’t present while a parent smokes.
“Fabrics obviously absorb a lot of these
toxic components. Just because no one’s in there smoking doesn’t mean
all the harmful [components] disappear,” McGoldrick said. “The best
thing to do as a smoking parent is to quit smoking. If they’re not ready
to quit yet or not able to succeed, then adopt smoke-free policies for
your home and car.”
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