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Study shows tobacco experimentation more prevalent in
asthmatic children and in schools with low academic performance
A study presented at CHEST 2003 found that inner-city children attending a school district's lowest academic performing schools had a higher rate of
tobacco exposure and experimentation than students in other district schools. It also found that children with asthma were more likely to
experiment with tobacco and be exposed to smoke than children without asthma.
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Tobacco Use Common in Schools Demonstrating Poor Academic Performance, and Tobacco Experimentation More Prevalent in Asthmatic Children than Nonasthmatics.
ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Students attending
schools with poor academic performance ratings have a significantly higher
rate of tobacco exposure and experimentation than students attending other
schools, says a new study presented at CHEST 2003, the 69th annual
international scientific assembly of the American College of Chest Physicians
(ACCP). The study found that inter-city children attending a district's lowest
academic performing schools had a higher rate of tobacco exposure and
experimentation than students attending other district schools. The study also
found that children with asthma were more likely to experiment with tobacco
and to be exposed to tobacco smoke than children without asthma.
"Tobacco use and asthma are more prevalent among poor and
minority populations, most often found in inter-city areas," said lead
researcher Salvatore Mangione, MD, FCCP, Associate Professor of Medicine,
Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA. "If
a child grows up in a household with smokers, that child is much more likely
to experiment with tobacco. Tobacco exposure, whether active or passive, is a
major trigger for asthma, and asthma is a known cause of absenteeism in
children, which can, in turn, lead to worse academic performance."
Researchers from Jefferson Medical College examined the
relationship between tobacco exposure and experimentation, and asthma
prevalence among 6,727 middle school students attending 65 Philadelphia public
schools. Of the students surveyed, 6,006 students attended schools managed by
the Philadelphia School District (PSD), while 721 students attended the lowest
academic performing schools in the PSD managed by the private organization,
Edison, Inc. Overall, 23.7 percent of PSD children and 24.5 percent of Edison
children reported having asthma. Among children with asthma, home exposure to
environmental smoke was reported by 73.2 percent of Edison children and 64.5
percent of PSD children. Overall experimentation with smoking was reported by
31 percent of Edison and 24.1 percent of PSD children. Results also showed a
significantly higher percentage of tobacco experimentation among children with
asthma in both school districts. In PSD children, 24.1 percent of asthmatics
and 20.5 percent of nonasthmatics reported tobacco experimentation, while
Edison school children reported 31 percent and 23.2 percent, respectively.
Children with asthma were also more exposed to secondhand smoke than children
without asthma.
"Many parents and family members who smoke do not realize
how tobacco exposure can impact a child's respiratory health," said Dr.
Mangione. "School-based programs are needed to educate parents and children on
the dangers of tobacco exposure and experimentation and their adverse effects
on asthma and other respiratory conditions."
"Asthma is the primary reason for hospitalization and
absenteeism in school children," said Richard S. Irwin, MD, FCCP, President of
the American College of Chest Physicians. "With tobacco exposure as a major
trigger of asthma, it is important for physicians to offer smoking cessation
counseling to patients who smoke and to educate those who continue smoking on
the effects that tobacco exposure has on the health of their children and
other family members."
CHEST 2003 is the 69th annual international scientific
assembly of the American College of Chest Physicians, being held in Orlando,
October 25-30. ACCP represents more than 15,700 members who provide clinical
respiratory, critical care, and cardiothoracic patient care in the United
States and throughout the world. ACCP's mission is to promote the prevention
and treatment of diseases of the chest through leadership, education,
research, and communication.
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