Estimate of deaths attributable to passive smoking among UK adults: da
http://www.100md.com
《英国医生杂志》
1 School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland 4006, Australia
Correspondence to: k.jamrozik@sph.uq.edu.au
Objective To estimate deaths from passive smoking in employees of the hospitality industry as well as in the general workforce and general population of the United Kingdom.
Design Calculation, using the formula for population attributable proportion, of deaths likely to have been caused by passive smoking at home and at work in the UK according to occupation. Sensitivity analyses to examine impact of varying assumptions regarding prevalence and risks of exposure.
Setting National UK databases of causes of death, employment, structure of households, and prevalences of active and passive smoking.
Main outcome measures Estimates of deaths due to passive smoking according to age group (< 65 or 65) and site of exposure (domestic or workplace).
Results Across the United Kingdom as a whole, passive smoking at work is likely to be responsible for the deaths of more than two employed people per working day (617 deaths per year), including 54 deaths in the hospitality industry each year. Each year passive smoking at home might account for another 2700 deaths in persons aged 20-64 years and 8000 deaths among people aged 65.
Conclusion Exposure at work might contribute up to one fifth of all deaths from passive smoking in the general population aged 20-64 years, and up to half of such deaths among employees of the hospitality industry. Adoption of smoke free policies in all workplaces and reductions in the general prevalence of active smoking would lead to substantial reductions in these avoidable deaths.
Evidence that exposure to passive smoking increases the risk of adults developing fatal diseases first emerged in 1981.1 2 Many epidemiological studies have been carried out, and reviews in three continents have now concluded that passive smoking is a cause of serious disease in adults and children.3-5 Smoke free policies have been introduced in various settings, but some workplaces still permit smoking and making hospitality venues (pubs, bars, nightclubs, hotels, and restaurants) smoke free is contentious. As the generation of tobacco smoke is not intrinsic to the process of selling food and drink, such venues could be made smoke free to protect the health of employees. Nevertheless, some organisations and individuals in the hospitality industry vigorously oppose this, claiming that such policies are an infringement of the personal liberty of their customers and will lead to damage to themselves.
It is important to distinguish between the economic impact people believe smoke free policies are likely to have before the policies themselves are introduced, the impact they are perceived to have had after their introduction, and careful studies of accepted economic indicators. The best economic indicators take into account the general economic conditions prevailing before and after smoke free policies are introduced because discretionary expenditure, such as that on drinking and dining, is particularly sensitive to these. Objective evidence has shown that smoke free policies have no adverse economic impact on the hospitality industry.6 7
By contrast, there have not been any calculations of the harm done to health from smoking in hospitality venues and certain other workplaces. I estimated the number of deaths due to passive smoking in employees of the hospitality industry and in the general workforce and general population of the United Kingdom.
Methods
Study population
In mid-2002, an estimated 39.4 million people aged 20 years and older lived in England and Wales; the figure for the United Kingdom was 12.9% larger at 44.5 million.8 The corresponding figures for people aged 65 years were 8.4 million and 9.4 million, respectively.8 At the same time 29.8 million people were in employment in the United Kingdom,9 of whom 320 262 (1.1%) worked in pubs, bars, and nightclubs, and 829 401 (2.8%) worked in hotels and restaurants.10
Prevalence of passive exposure to tobacco smoke
Among adults of working age, around 30% are smokers,11 and the estimated prevalence of passive smoking at home is 42%,12 13 but this figure has been discounted to 37% to allow for the 13% of individuals who live alone. In people aged 65, the prevalence of active smoking is 15%11 but partnering is non-random with respect to smoking status and 37% of people live alone. Allowance for both of these factors leads to an estimated prevalence of passive exposure at home of 13%. Nearly all pubs, bars, nightclubs, hotels, and restaurants currently permit smoking in at least some areas, leading to some passive exposure in all of their employees. The prevalence of passive smoking at work in the general workforce is 11%.14
Risks associated with exposure to tobacco smoke
Many studies have examined the hazards associated with domestic exposure of non-smokers to tobacco smoke generated by their partners, providing a relatively clear picture of the risks for lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease. After a report by
Woodward and Laugesen to the New Zealand Ministry of Health,15 based on earlier calculations by Kawachi et al,16 I have adopted relative risks of 1.24 and 1.30, respectively, for these exposures, irrespective or age or sex. Studies of exposure at work are less numerous but suggest that figures of 1.24 and 1.20, respectively, are appropriate for both sexes.15
Seven studies, varying considerably in size and design, have examined the association between passive smoking and risk of stroke.17-23 According to the method used by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Working Party,4 I have used the median of the available values (1.45) as the best estimate of the probable relative risks and the lower and upper quartiles of the series (1.15 and 1.76, respectively) to define the uncertainty surrounding this estimate. As there are no equivalent estimates available for passive exposure at work, I applied the same figures for that setting.
Law and Hackshaw examined eight studies and estimated that passive smoking increases the risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in adults by 25% (95% confidence interval 10% to 43%).24 I omitted chronic obstructive pulmonary disease from my present calculations, however, because none of the reviews cited earlier3-5 accepts that it is causally related to passive smoking.
Though there are no published studies of the association between mortality in hospitality staff and passive smoking, Jarvis reported that non-smoking bar staff in London had a median salivary cotinine of 3.65 ng/ml, a figure 3.04 times higher than the median found in the same study for non-smokers married to smokers.25 Application of this figure to the typical excess risks for workplace exposure used by Woodward and Laugesen15 suggests that pub, bar, and nightclub staff experience relative risks of 1.73, 1.61, and 2.52 for lung cancer, heart disease, and stroke, respectively. Because staff working in hotels and restaurants are exposed to less smoke26 I set their risks at the same level as for the general workforce.
Mortality from target conditions
I obtained counts of deaths from lung cancer (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision, codes C33, C34), ischaemic heart disease (I20-I25), and stroke (I60-I69) in England and Wales during 2003 from the Office for National Statistics27 according to age (< 65 or 65). I adjusted the figures upwards by 12.9% and 12.4%, respectively,8 to obtain UK estimates. To calculate the numbers of deaths in all employed people I multiplied the relevant figure for those aged 20-64 by 0.85 (the size of the total workforce relative to that of the whole population aged 20-64 in mid-2002). Similarly, multiplying the relevant estimated figure for deaths in the workforce by 1.1% and 2.8% gave numbers for cause specific deaths in workers in pubs or bars and in restaurants.
Statistical methods
I derived estimates of the cause specific numbers of deaths for both sexes combined for people aged < 65 and 65 and for each site of exposure (home or work), using the formula {/} for population attributable proportion (where p = prevalence of passive smoking at home and RR = relative risk) and applying the resulting fraction to the relevant total numbers of deaths from a specific cause. The number for total attributable deaths is the sum of the three cause specific numbers of deaths for a particular age group and setting.
I assumed that all employees in the hospitality industry were exposed to the same amount of passive smoking at home as the rest of the population. The hospitality industry employs a many young, casual, or temporary staff in a workforce with a high turnover,10 and such people may soon shed the additional risk associated with heavy passive exposure to tobacco smoke in these venues when they move to other industries. The proportion of staff for whom hospitality work represents their chief lifetime occupation is not known but I estimated it at 20%. Accordingly, I divided by five the attributable numbers of deaths from passive smoking in hospitality venues derived from the size of the industry-wide workforce.
I tested the sensitivity of the results to some of the assumptions underlying the calculations. The calculations were repeated using the upper and lower 95% confidence limits of the relative risks, as given by Woodward and Laugesen.15 The effect of setting the relative risk for stroke to that for ischaemic heart disease was also tested. Finally, I performed a new set of calculations using the original relative risks but setting the prevalences of smoking to those currently observed in Australia (24% in middle aged adults; 10% in those aged 65)28 and assuming all hospitality venues had become smoke free, as has occurred recently in Republic of Ireland and Norway.
Results
Table 1 shows mortality statistics, and table 2 summarises the basic calculations. In 2003, an estimated 617 people died from the effects of passive smoking at work across the whole of the United Kingdom, 54 of whom were long term employees of the hospitality industry. Of the 54 people who died, almost half were employed in the pub/bar/nightclub sector, despite the smaller size of its workforce, because staff are exposed to higher concentrations of tobacco smoke. In the whole population aged 20-64, more than 2700 deaths attributable to passive smoking at home brought the total fatalities related to passive smoking to 3343. In those aged 65, the total number of attributable deaths approaches 8000, with fatal strokes and heart disease each contributing more than three thousand events.
Table 1 Deaths by cause, age, and occupation, United Kingdom, 2003 (population figures are x1000)
Table 2 Deaths attributable to passive smoking by cause, age, occupation, and site of exposure, United Kingdom, 2003
Table 3 shows the effects of varying key assumptions. When I used the lower confidence limits of the relative risks for each of the three conditions linked to passive smoking, the number of attributable deaths related to domestic exposure fell by around 45% and those secondary to exposure at work by two thirds. When I used upper estimates of the relative risks, deaths in the general population and hospitality workforce were around 40% higher than in table 2 and those in the workforce as a whole increased even more because of the wide confidence intervals surrounding estimates of the risk for ischaemic heart disease associated with passive exposure at work. Table 3 also shows that all totals are distinctly sensitive to the relative risks used to calculate deaths attributable to stroke, where there is least information available on the risks associated with passive smoking. Finally, if all workplaces in the United Kingdom became smoke free, as has occurred in the Republic of Ireland, and if the general prevalence of smoking fell to levels presently seen in Australia, not only would all deaths attributable to passive smoking at work eventually disappear, but those in the general population related to passive smoking at home would also fall by a third.
Table 3 Results of sensitivity analyses for deaths attributable to passive smoking
Discussion
Hirayama T. Non-smoking wives of heavy smokers have a higher risk of lung cancer: a study from Japan. BMJ 1981;282: 183-5.
Trichopoulos D, Kalandidi A, Sparros L, MacMahon B. Lung cancer and passive smoking. Int J Cancer 1981;27: 1-4.
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. Health effects of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. Final report September 1997. Sacramento: California Environmental Protection Agency, 1997.
National Health and Medical Research Council Working Party. The health effects of passive smoking: a scientific information paper. Canberra: NHMRC, 1997.
Scientific Committee on Tobacco and Health. Report of the scientific committee on tobacco and health. London: Stationery Office, 1998.
Glantz SA. Effect of smokefree bar laws on bar revenues in California. Tob Control 2000;9: 111-2.
Wakefield M, Siahpush M, Scollo M, Lal A, Hyland A, McCaul K, Miller C. The effect of a smoke-free law on restaurant business in South Australia. Aust N Z J Public Health 2002;26: 375-82.
Office for National Statistics. Mid-2002 population estimates: United Kingdom: estimated resident population by single year of age and sex—provisional results from the Manchester matching exercise (with armed forces correction). www.statistics.gov.uk (accessed 9 May 2004).
Office for National Statistics. Employment: workforce jobs by industry. www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/lmsuk0404.pdf (accessed 9 May 2004).
Sector Skills Development Agency. Market assessment for the hospitality, leisure, travel and tourism sector. Wath-upon-Dearne, South Yorkshire: SSDA, 2002.
Office for National Statistics. General household survey, living in Britain, 2002. Table 8.5: cigarette-smoking status by age and marital status. www.statistics.gov.uk (accessed 9 May 2004).
Jarvis MJ, Goddard E, Higgins V, Feyerabend C, Bryant A, Cook DG. Children's exposure to passive smoking in England since the 1980s: cotinine evidence from population surveys. BMJ 2000;321: 343-5.
Kurukulaaratchy RJ, Matthews S, Arshad SH. Does environment mediate the earlier onset of the persistent childhood asthma phenotype? Pediatrics 2004;113: 345-50.
BMRB International. A compilation of UK labour force statistics and smoking restrictions by ACCESS, for ASH. London: Action on Smoking and Health, 2002.
Woodward A, Laugesen M. Deaths in New Zealand attributable to second-hand cigarette smoke: a report to the New Zealand Ministry of Health. Wellington: Wellington School of Medicine, 2000.
Kawachi I, Pearce NE, Jackson RT. Deaths from lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease due to passive smoking in New Zealand. N Z Med J 1989;102: 337-40.
Molgaard CA, Bartok A, Peddecord KM, Rothrock J. The association between cerebrovascular disease and smoking: a case-control study. Neuroepidemiology 1986;5: 88-94.
Lee PN, Chamberlain J, Alderson MR. Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and of smoking-associated diseases. Br J Cancer 1986;54: 97-105.
Donnan GA, McNeil JJ, Adena MA, Doyle AE, O'Malley HM, Neill GC. Smoking as a risk factor for cerebral ischaemia. Lancet 1989;ii: 643-7.
Bonita R, Duncan J, Truelsen T, Jackson RT, Beaglehole R. Passive smoking as well as active smoking increases the risk of acute stroke. Tob Control 1999;8: 156-60.
You RX, Thrift AG, McNeill JJ, Davis SM, Donnan GA. Ischemic stroke and passive exposure to spouses' cigarette smoking. Melbourne stroke risk factor study (MERFS) group. Am J Public Health 1999;89: 572-5.
Iribarren C, Darbinian J, Klatsky AL, Friedman GD. Cohort study of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and risk of first ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack. Neuroepidemiology 2004;23: 38-44.
Whincup PH, Gilg JA, Emberson JR, Jarvis MJ, Feyerband C, Bryant A, et al. Passive smoking and risk of coronary heart disease and stroke: prospective study with cotinine measurement. BMJ 2004;329: 200-5.
Law MR, Hackshaw AK. Environmental tobacco smoke. Br Med Bull 1996;52: 22-34.
Jarvis M. Quantitative survey of exposure to other people's smoke in London bar staff. London: Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College, 2001.
Johnsson T, Tuomi T, Hyvarinen M, Svinhufvud J, Rothberg R, Reijula K. Occupational exposure of non-smoking restaurant personnel to environmental tobacco smoke in Finland. Am J Industrial Med 2003;43: 523-31.
Office for National Statistics. Deaths by age, sex and underlying cause, 2003 registrations. www.statistics.gov.uk/STABASE/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D8257.xls (accessed 3 June 2004).
White V, Hill D, Siahpush M, Bobevski I. How has the prevalence of cigarette smoking changed among Australian adults? Trends in smoking prevalence between 1980 and 2001. Tob Control 2003;12(suppl II): 67-74.
Nurminen MM, Jaakkola MS. Mortality from occupational exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in Finland. J Occup Environ Med 2001;43: 687-93.
McDonnell S. Anti-smokers hail landmark victory as hotels pay $20,000. Australian 1991 June 13: 3.
((Konrad Jamrozik, professor of evidence b)
Correspondence to: k.jamrozik@sph.uq.edu.au
Objective To estimate deaths from passive smoking in employees of the hospitality industry as well as in the general workforce and general population of the United Kingdom.
Design Calculation, using the formula for population attributable proportion, of deaths likely to have been caused by passive smoking at home and at work in the UK according to occupation. Sensitivity analyses to examine impact of varying assumptions regarding prevalence and risks of exposure.
Setting National UK databases of causes of death, employment, structure of households, and prevalences of active and passive smoking.
Main outcome measures Estimates of deaths due to passive smoking according to age group (< 65 or 65) and site of exposure (domestic or workplace).
Results Across the United Kingdom as a whole, passive smoking at work is likely to be responsible for the deaths of more than two employed people per working day (617 deaths per year), including 54 deaths in the hospitality industry each year. Each year passive smoking at home might account for another 2700 deaths in persons aged 20-64 years and 8000 deaths among people aged 65.
Conclusion Exposure at work might contribute up to one fifth of all deaths from passive smoking in the general population aged 20-64 years, and up to half of such deaths among employees of the hospitality industry. Adoption of smoke free policies in all workplaces and reductions in the general prevalence of active smoking would lead to substantial reductions in these avoidable deaths.
Evidence that exposure to passive smoking increases the risk of adults developing fatal diseases first emerged in 1981.1 2 Many epidemiological studies have been carried out, and reviews in three continents have now concluded that passive smoking is a cause of serious disease in adults and children.3-5 Smoke free policies have been introduced in various settings, but some workplaces still permit smoking and making hospitality venues (pubs, bars, nightclubs, hotels, and restaurants) smoke free is contentious. As the generation of tobacco smoke is not intrinsic to the process of selling food and drink, such venues could be made smoke free to protect the health of employees. Nevertheless, some organisations and individuals in the hospitality industry vigorously oppose this, claiming that such policies are an infringement of the personal liberty of their customers and will lead to damage to themselves.
It is important to distinguish between the economic impact people believe smoke free policies are likely to have before the policies themselves are introduced, the impact they are perceived to have had after their introduction, and careful studies of accepted economic indicators. The best economic indicators take into account the general economic conditions prevailing before and after smoke free policies are introduced because discretionary expenditure, such as that on drinking and dining, is particularly sensitive to these. Objective evidence has shown that smoke free policies have no adverse economic impact on the hospitality industry.6 7
By contrast, there have not been any calculations of the harm done to health from smoking in hospitality venues and certain other workplaces. I estimated the number of deaths due to passive smoking in employees of the hospitality industry and in the general workforce and general population of the United Kingdom.
Methods
Study population
In mid-2002, an estimated 39.4 million people aged 20 years and older lived in England and Wales; the figure for the United Kingdom was 12.9% larger at 44.5 million.8 The corresponding figures for people aged 65 years were 8.4 million and 9.4 million, respectively.8 At the same time 29.8 million people were in employment in the United Kingdom,9 of whom 320 262 (1.1%) worked in pubs, bars, and nightclubs, and 829 401 (2.8%) worked in hotels and restaurants.10
Prevalence of passive exposure to tobacco smoke
Among adults of working age, around 30% are smokers,11 and the estimated prevalence of passive smoking at home is 42%,12 13 but this figure has been discounted to 37% to allow for the 13% of individuals who live alone. In people aged 65, the prevalence of active smoking is 15%11 but partnering is non-random with respect to smoking status and 37% of people live alone. Allowance for both of these factors leads to an estimated prevalence of passive exposure at home of 13%. Nearly all pubs, bars, nightclubs, hotels, and restaurants currently permit smoking in at least some areas, leading to some passive exposure in all of their employees. The prevalence of passive smoking at work in the general workforce is 11%.14
Risks associated with exposure to tobacco smoke
Many studies have examined the hazards associated with domestic exposure of non-smokers to tobacco smoke generated by their partners, providing a relatively clear picture of the risks for lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease. After a report by
Woodward and Laugesen to the New Zealand Ministry of Health,15 based on earlier calculations by Kawachi et al,16 I have adopted relative risks of 1.24 and 1.30, respectively, for these exposures, irrespective or age or sex. Studies of exposure at work are less numerous but suggest that figures of 1.24 and 1.20, respectively, are appropriate for both sexes.15
Seven studies, varying considerably in size and design, have examined the association between passive smoking and risk of stroke.17-23 According to the method used by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Working Party,4 I have used the median of the available values (1.45) as the best estimate of the probable relative risks and the lower and upper quartiles of the series (1.15 and 1.76, respectively) to define the uncertainty surrounding this estimate. As there are no equivalent estimates available for passive exposure at work, I applied the same figures for that setting.
Law and Hackshaw examined eight studies and estimated that passive smoking increases the risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in adults by 25% (95% confidence interval 10% to 43%).24 I omitted chronic obstructive pulmonary disease from my present calculations, however, because none of the reviews cited earlier3-5 accepts that it is causally related to passive smoking.
Though there are no published studies of the association between mortality in hospitality staff and passive smoking, Jarvis reported that non-smoking bar staff in London had a median salivary cotinine of 3.65 ng/ml, a figure 3.04 times higher than the median found in the same study for non-smokers married to smokers.25 Application of this figure to the typical excess risks for workplace exposure used by Woodward and Laugesen15 suggests that pub, bar, and nightclub staff experience relative risks of 1.73, 1.61, and 2.52 for lung cancer, heart disease, and stroke, respectively. Because staff working in hotels and restaurants are exposed to less smoke26 I set their risks at the same level as for the general workforce.
Mortality from target conditions
I obtained counts of deaths from lung cancer (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision, codes C33, C34), ischaemic heart disease (I20-I25), and stroke (I60-I69) in England and Wales during 2003 from the Office for National Statistics27 according to age (< 65 or 65). I adjusted the figures upwards by 12.9% and 12.4%, respectively,8 to obtain UK estimates. To calculate the numbers of deaths in all employed people I multiplied the relevant figure for those aged 20-64 by 0.85 (the size of the total workforce relative to that of the whole population aged 20-64 in mid-2002). Similarly, multiplying the relevant estimated figure for deaths in the workforce by 1.1% and 2.8% gave numbers for cause specific deaths in workers in pubs or bars and in restaurants.
Statistical methods
I derived estimates of the cause specific numbers of deaths for both sexes combined for people aged < 65 and 65 and for each site of exposure (home or work), using the formula {/} for population attributable proportion (where p = prevalence of passive smoking at home and RR = relative risk) and applying the resulting fraction to the relevant total numbers of deaths from a specific cause. The number for total attributable deaths is the sum of the three cause specific numbers of deaths for a particular age group and setting.
I assumed that all employees in the hospitality industry were exposed to the same amount of passive smoking at home as the rest of the population. The hospitality industry employs a many young, casual, or temporary staff in a workforce with a high turnover,10 and such people may soon shed the additional risk associated with heavy passive exposure to tobacco smoke in these venues when they move to other industries. The proportion of staff for whom hospitality work represents their chief lifetime occupation is not known but I estimated it at 20%. Accordingly, I divided by five the attributable numbers of deaths from passive smoking in hospitality venues derived from the size of the industry-wide workforce.
I tested the sensitivity of the results to some of the assumptions underlying the calculations. The calculations were repeated using the upper and lower 95% confidence limits of the relative risks, as given by Woodward and Laugesen.15 The effect of setting the relative risk for stroke to that for ischaemic heart disease was also tested. Finally, I performed a new set of calculations using the original relative risks but setting the prevalences of smoking to those currently observed in Australia (24% in middle aged adults; 10% in those aged 65)28 and assuming all hospitality venues had become smoke free, as has occurred recently in Republic of Ireland and Norway.
Results
Table 1 shows mortality statistics, and table 2 summarises the basic calculations. In 2003, an estimated 617 people died from the effects of passive smoking at work across the whole of the United Kingdom, 54 of whom were long term employees of the hospitality industry. Of the 54 people who died, almost half were employed in the pub/bar/nightclub sector, despite the smaller size of its workforce, because staff are exposed to higher concentrations of tobacco smoke. In the whole population aged 20-64, more than 2700 deaths attributable to passive smoking at home brought the total fatalities related to passive smoking to 3343. In those aged 65, the total number of attributable deaths approaches 8000, with fatal strokes and heart disease each contributing more than three thousand events.
Table 1 Deaths by cause, age, and occupation, United Kingdom, 2003 (population figures are x1000)
Table 2 Deaths attributable to passive smoking by cause, age, occupation, and site of exposure, United Kingdom, 2003
Table 3 shows the effects of varying key assumptions. When I used the lower confidence limits of the relative risks for each of the three conditions linked to passive smoking, the number of attributable deaths related to domestic exposure fell by around 45% and those secondary to exposure at work by two thirds. When I used upper estimates of the relative risks, deaths in the general population and hospitality workforce were around 40% higher than in table 2 and those in the workforce as a whole increased even more because of the wide confidence intervals surrounding estimates of the risk for ischaemic heart disease associated with passive exposure at work. Table 3 also shows that all totals are distinctly sensitive to the relative risks used to calculate deaths attributable to stroke, where there is least information available on the risks associated with passive smoking. Finally, if all workplaces in the United Kingdom became smoke free, as has occurred in the Republic of Ireland, and if the general prevalence of smoking fell to levels presently seen in Australia, not only would all deaths attributable to passive smoking at work eventually disappear, but those in the general population related to passive smoking at home would also fall by a third.
Table 3 Results of sensitivity analyses for deaths attributable to passive smoking
Discussion
Hirayama T. Non-smoking wives of heavy smokers have a higher risk of lung cancer: a study from Japan. BMJ 1981;282: 183-5.
Trichopoulos D, Kalandidi A, Sparros L, MacMahon B. Lung cancer and passive smoking. Int J Cancer 1981;27: 1-4.
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. Health effects of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. Final report September 1997. Sacramento: California Environmental Protection Agency, 1997.
National Health and Medical Research Council Working Party. The health effects of passive smoking: a scientific information paper. Canberra: NHMRC, 1997.
Scientific Committee on Tobacco and Health. Report of the scientific committee on tobacco and health. London: Stationery Office, 1998.
Glantz SA. Effect of smokefree bar laws on bar revenues in California. Tob Control 2000;9: 111-2.
Wakefield M, Siahpush M, Scollo M, Lal A, Hyland A, McCaul K, Miller C. The effect of a smoke-free law on restaurant business in South Australia. Aust N Z J Public Health 2002;26: 375-82.
Office for National Statistics. Mid-2002 population estimates: United Kingdom: estimated resident population by single year of age and sex—provisional results from the Manchester matching exercise (with armed forces correction). www.statistics.gov.uk (accessed 9 May 2004).
Office for National Statistics. Employment: workforce jobs by industry. www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/lmsuk0404.pdf (accessed 9 May 2004).
Sector Skills Development Agency. Market assessment for the hospitality, leisure, travel and tourism sector. Wath-upon-Dearne, South Yorkshire: SSDA, 2002.
Office for National Statistics. General household survey, living in Britain, 2002. Table 8.5: cigarette-smoking status by age and marital status. www.statistics.gov.uk (accessed 9 May 2004).
Jarvis MJ, Goddard E, Higgins V, Feyerabend C, Bryant A, Cook DG. Children's exposure to passive smoking in England since the 1980s: cotinine evidence from population surveys. BMJ 2000;321: 343-5.
Kurukulaaratchy RJ, Matthews S, Arshad SH. Does environment mediate the earlier onset of the persistent childhood asthma phenotype? Pediatrics 2004;113: 345-50.
BMRB International. A compilation of UK labour force statistics and smoking restrictions by ACCESS, for ASH. London: Action on Smoking and Health, 2002.
Woodward A, Laugesen M. Deaths in New Zealand attributable to second-hand cigarette smoke: a report to the New Zealand Ministry of Health. Wellington: Wellington School of Medicine, 2000.
Kawachi I, Pearce NE, Jackson RT. Deaths from lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease due to passive smoking in New Zealand. N Z Med J 1989;102: 337-40.
Molgaard CA, Bartok A, Peddecord KM, Rothrock J. The association between cerebrovascular disease and smoking: a case-control study. Neuroepidemiology 1986;5: 88-94.
Lee PN, Chamberlain J, Alderson MR. Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and of smoking-associated diseases. Br J Cancer 1986;54: 97-105.
Donnan GA, McNeil JJ, Adena MA, Doyle AE, O'Malley HM, Neill GC. Smoking as a risk factor for cerebral ischaemia. Lancet 1989;ii: 643-7.
Bonita R, Duncan J, Truelsen T, Jackson RT, Beaglehole R. Passive smoking as well as active smoking increases the risk of acute stroke. Tob Control 1999;8: 156-60.
You RX, Thrift AG, McNeill JJ, Davis SM, Donnan GA. Ischemic stroke and passive exposure to spouses' cigarette smoking. Melbourne stroke risk factor study (MERFS) group. Am J Public Health 1999;89: 572-5.
Iribarren C, Darbinian J, Klatsky AL, Friedman GD. Cohort study of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and risk of first ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack. Neuroepidemiology 2004;23: 38-44.
Whincup PH, Gilg JA, Emberson JR, Jarvis MJ, Feyerband C, Bryant A, et al. Passive smoking and risk of coronary heart disease and stroke: prospective study with cotinine measurement. BMJ 2004;329: 200-5.
Law MR, Hackshaw AK. Environmental tobacco smoke. Br Med Bull 1996;52: 22-34.
Jarvis M. Quantitative survey of exposure to other people's smoke in London bar staff. London: Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College, 2001.
Johnsson T, Tuomi T, Hyvarinen M, Svinhufvud J, Rothberg R, Reijula K. Occupational exposure of non-smoking restaurant personnel to environmental tobacco smoke in Finland. Am J Industrial Med 2003;43: 523-31.
Office for National Statistics. Deaths by age, sex and underlying cause, 2003 registrations. www.statistics.gov.uk/STABASE/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D8257.xls (accessed 3 June 2004).
White V, Hill D, Siahpush M, Bobevski I. How has the prevalence of cigarette smoking changed among Australian adults? Trends in smoking prevalence between 1980 and 2001. Tob Control 2003;12(suppl II): 67-74.
Nurminen MM, Jaakkola MS. Mortality from occupational exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in Finland. J Occup Environ Med 2001;43: 687-93.
McDonnell S. Anti-smokers hail landmark victory as hotels pay $20,000. Australian 1991 June 13: 3.
((Konrad Jamrozik, professor of evidence b)