At a time when many Americans have managed to kick the habit, a
surprising new government report finds that asthmatic kids are just as
likely to be exposed to secondhand smoke as they were a decade ago,
especially if they come from poor families.
There is some good
news, though. During the same time period, secondhand smoke exposure
dropped significantly among kids who don’t have asthma, according to the
report by the National Center for Health Statistics.
“What
surprised us was that among kids with asthma, secondhand exposure to
smoke did not decrease at all,” said the report’s lead author, Dr.
Kenneth B. Quinto, an epidemic intelligence service officer with the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “I think we could be doing a
better job educating parents with children with asthma about the health
effects of secondhand exposure.” Dunhill cigarettes online at low prices.
The new findings are
“counterintuitive,” said Dr. Sande Okelo, an asthma expert unaffiliated
with the new study and an assistant professor of pediatric pulmonology
the David Geffen School of Medicine and the Mattel Children’s Hospital,
both at the University of California, Los Angeles. “I think this would
be very unexpected for your average physician, who would assume that the
rates of smoking are going down for everyone.”
The data for the
new report came from the ongoing National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES), which periodically interviews and examines a
large nationally representative sample of Americans.
Quinto and
his colleagues looked at health information collected on 12,000 children
aged 3 to 19. Along with surveys, the NHANES researchers collected
blood samples, which were tested for the presence of serum cotinine,
which is a marker for secondhand smoke exposure.
The researchers
found that from 1999 to 2010 the percentage of children without asthma
who had been exposed to secondhand smoke decreased from 57 to 44 percent
, while there was a barely perceptible drop, 58 percent to 54 percent,
among kids with asthma.
When the researchers looked only at
recent data - from 2007 to 2010 - they found the biggest disparities in
secondhand smoke exposure were related to income.
Among families
with incomes below 185 percent of federal poverty guidelines, nearly 68
percent of asthmatic kids showed signs of exposure to secondhand smoke,
as compared to nearly 59 percent of those without asthma. Among families
with incomes between 185 and 350 percent of the poverty line, the
numbers were even more striking: 60 percent of kids with asthma showed
signs of being exposed to secondhand smoke, as compared to nearly 46
percent of those without asthma. Among families with incomes above 350
percent of the poverty line, there was virtually no difference between
kids with asthma and those without: 23 percent versus 25 percent.
The
explanation for those findings may be that income can be a proxy for
educational level, Quinto said, adding that the more educated parents
may better understand how smoking affects asthma.
Quinto said this study didn't look at the role secondhand smoke may have played in causing asthma.
The
report also found that non-Hispanic black children had a higher rate of
exposure to secondhand smoke, whether they suffered from asthma or not,
at 63 percent. Mexican American kids had the lowest rates of secondhand
smoke exposure. But again, the rate was higher among those with asthma,
36 percent versus 27 percent.
The new findings fall in line with
other research on poor kids and asthma, said Patrick Breysse, a
professor in the department of environmental science and co-director of
the Center for Childhood Asthma in an Urban Environment at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public health.
“I’m not entirely
surprised by the results,” Breysse said. “We know that over the last 10
years smoking has been banned in public places. The last bastion of
smoking is the home environment.”
Beyond that, studies have found
that asthma rates are higher in low income areas of the inner city, and
smoking rates are higher in the same areas, so their intersection is not
surprising, Breysse said.
The new report makes it clear that
“there needs to be a more targeted effort to reach some of these groups
that are at risk for ongoing exposure to secondhand smoke,” Okelo said.
Breysse
agreed. “I think there has to be a concerted campaign to get the
message out to all ethnic groups and all socioeconomic strata.”
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