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The health effects of involuntary smoking.

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TLDR
The important effects of passive smoke exposure in childhood are twofold: the slight reduction in pulmonary function level may predispose individuals to increased risks from environmental agents later in life and having a parent who smokes substantially increases the likelihood that a child will become a smoker.
Abstract
Involuntary smoking is defined as the exposure of nonsmokers to tobacco combustion products in the indoor environment. Involuntary smokers are exposed to a quantitatively smaller and qualitatively different smoke exposure than active smokers. Quantitation of exposure is particularly difficult in both physiologic and epidemiologic studies. Acute physiologic studies have documented minimal physiologic changes in healthy subjects. However, individuals with heart or lung disease may be differentially affected. A relatively large body of data relates parental (particularly maternal) cigarette smoking to the occurrence of both acute respiratory illnesses and chronic respiratory symptoms in children. The effect seems to be greatest early in life and cannot be separated from in utero exposure. Data linking parental smoking to lower levels of pulmonary function are all cross-sectional and less conclusive. What is apparent is that the magnitude of the direct effect of passive smoke exposure is likely to be relatively small (from 1 to 5% reduction in maximally obtained lung function level in exposed children). Data on adults are insufficient to allow for a quantitative estimate. The important effects of passive smoke exposure in childhood are twofold. The slight reduction in pulmonary function level may predispose individuals to increased risks from environmental agents later in life. In addition, having a parent who smokes substantially increases the likelihood that a child will become a smoker. Finally, two studies have linked lung cancer in nonsmokers to exposure to spouses' cigarette smoke. Further research is needed to confirm these findings. Involuntary smoking may have important health effects, either direct or indirect, which deserve further study.

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The impact of passive smoking on emergency room visits of urban children with asthma.

TL;DR: In this article, a study of 276 children with asthma from 259 low income families was analyzed to test the hypothesis that passive smoking is associated with frequency of emergency room (ER) visits, hospitalizations, and impaired pulmonary function.
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The effect of cigarette smoke from the mother on bronchial responsiveness and severity of symptoms in children with asthma.

TL;DR: The effect of parental smoking was assessed in 94 consecutively observed children, aged 7 to 17 years, who had a history of asthmatic wheezing and there was a highly significant correlation between the results of the tests and the number of cigarettes the mother smoked while she was in the house.
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The effect of age on methacholine response

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Passive exposure to tobacco smoke: saliva cotinine concentrations in a representative population sample of non-smoking schoolchildren.

TL;DR: Saliva cotinine concentrations in 569 non-smoking schoolchildren were strongly related to the smoking habits of their parents, and the unsolicited burden may be prolonged throughout childhood and poses a definite risk to health.
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The Canadian asthma primary prevention study: outcomes at 2 years of age.

TL;DR: This multifaceted intervention program during a window of opportunity in the first year of life was effective in preventing asthma in high-risk children at 2 years of age.
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