By DR. SALLY ROBINSON
As we approach the holiday season with all the parties and social contacts, it is time to learn about the concept of third-hand smoke and its harmful effects. Everyone has experienced third-hand smoke. It is when you step into an elevator and it smells as if someone has just lit up a cigarette but there is no one there.
Third-hand smoke is tobacco smoke contamination that remains after the cigarette has been extinguished. Dr. Jonathan Winickoff, a pediatrician at the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center in Boston has published this new aspect of the dangers of cigarette smoking in pediatrics in a respected pediatric journal. According to the study, a large number of people, particularly smokers, have no idea that third-hand smoke, a mixture of toxins that linger in carpets, sofas, clothes and other materials hours and even days after the cigarette is put out, is a health hazard for infants and children. Third-hand smoke refers to the tobacco toxins that build up over time. One cigarette coats the room; a second adds another coat and so on. The smaller the room and the number of cigarettes increase the level of the toxins. In a tiny space like a car the deposition is really heavy. Smokers themselves are also contaminated. Smokers actually emit toxins from their clothing and hair.
The 2006 surgeon general’s report says there is no risk-free level of tobacco exposure. There are 250 poisonous toxins in cigarette smoke. One of these toxins is lead which it has been shown that very tiny levels of exposure are associated with lowered IQ. There is also cyanide and arsenic in third-hand smoke.
Infants and children are much more susceptible to third-hand smoke as the developing brain is more at risk, their small size makes the dose of ingested toxins more dangerous and they are closer to the floors and put everything in their mouths.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends the following:
• Hire only nonsmoking baby sitters and care providers;
• If smokers visit your home, store their belongings out of your children’s reach;
• Never smoke in your children’s presence or in areas where they spend a lot of time, including your home and car;
• Try to inform others, such as family members who smoke, about third-hand smoke and request they not smoke in their home that your children might visit; and
• If you smoke, quit. Talk to your doctor to learn about resources and support networks. Some of the resources are the American Lung Association, www.lungusa.org; The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Smoke-Free Homes program, www.epa.gov/smokefree; and Clinical Effort Against Secondhand Smoke Exposure, www.ceasetobacco.org.
Sally Robinson is a clinical professor of pediatrics at UTMB Children’s Hospital. This column isn’t intended to replace the advice of your child’s physician.