Accessibility Tools

Youth and Teens Effects and Exposure

  • Secondhand smoke exposure causes respiratory symptoms, including cough, phlegm, wheeze and breathlessness, among school-aged children.
  • On average, children are exposed to more secondhand smoke than nonsmoking adults.

Statistics

  • More than 4,000 different chemicals have been identified in secondhand smoke and at least 43 of these chemicals cause cancer.
  • On average, children are exposed to more secondhand smoke than nonsmoking adults.
  • Approximately 26 percent of adults in the United States currently smoke cigarettes, and 50 to 67 percent of children less than five years of age live in homes with at least one adult smoker.
  • 28 percent of high schoolers are exposed to secondhand smoke in their own homes.
  • A recent study found that 34 percent of teens begin smoking as a result of tobacco company promotional activities.
  • Among middle school students who were current smokers, 71 percent reported never being asked to show proof of age when buying cigarettes in a store, and 66 percent were not refused purchase because of their age.

Checklist for Protection Against Secondhand Smoke:

Young children

  • Remember that you are a powerful role model. If you don’t smoke, your children are less likely to smoke.
  • Make your home and car smoke-free spaces. Put up no-smoking stickers and signs in your home.
  • Make sure you and your kids aren’t exposed to second-hand smoke at daycare, school or friends’ homes.
  • Support businesses and activities that are smoke-free. Let other businesses owners know that you can’t support their businesses until they become 100 percent smoke-free too.
  • If you can’t find a smoke-free restaurant and must go to one that allows some smoking, ask to sit in the nonsmoking section.
  • If your asthma or COPD is triggered by smoke, don’t risk it – stay away from any place that allows smoking.
  • Support laws that restrict smoking.

Youth and Teens

  • Talk to your children about smoking; they’ll be less likely to smoke than if you ignore the problem.
  • Support tobacco education in the schools and ban all smoking on school grounds, on school buses, and at school-sponsored events for students, school personnel and visitors.
  • Ask that schools enforce the policy and consistently administer penalties for violations and that this is communicated in written and oral form to students,staff and visitors.
  • Vote for public smoking restrictions as an important component of the social environment that supports healthy behavior, reducing the number of opportunities to smoke, and making smoking less socially acceptable.
  • Support tax increases on tobacco products so young people cannot afford them.

Teens

  • If your friends smoke, ask them in a caring way to quit or at least not to smoke around you.
  • Peers, siblings, and friends are powerful influences on you and others. Understand that the most common situation for first trying a cigarette is with a friend who already smokes.

Families

  • Work together to uphold restrictions on tobacco advertising and promotions.

Sources and Resources

The Health Consequences of Involuntary Exposure to Tobacco Smoke: Children are Hurt by Secondhand Smoke. A Report of the Surgeon General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2006;

CDC. Tobacco Use, Access & Exposure to Tobacco Among Middle & High School Students, US 2004 MMWR. Vol. 54(12) April 2005.

American Legacy Foundation. 2004 National Youth Tobacco Survey. 2005

CDC. Cigarette Use Among High School Students – United States, 1991-2003. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 2004; 53(23): 499-502.

King C, Siegel M. The Master Settlement Agreement with the Tobacco Industry and Cigarette Advertising in Magazines. New England Journal of Medicine 2001; 345: 504-511.

Copyright 2015. American Academy of Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery

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John U. Coniglio, MD, LLC

1065 Senator Keating Blvd., Suite 240
Rochester, New York 14618
585-256-3550
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