Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist

Tobacco exposure increases mortality and morbidity of the fetus, the child, the adolescent, and their children in turn. Nearly half the children in the world are exposed. Smoking is not merely personal choice or personal responsibility; those subtle phrases undermine those who have no choice in t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Philip Keith Pattemore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fped.2013.00020/full
id doaj-d7a2fed1c6864840ad9b870cb5c8fa24
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d7a2fed1c6864840ad9b870cb5c8fa242020-11-24T22:43:48ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Pediatrics2296-23602013-08-01110.3389/fped.2013.0002062490Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-existPhilip Keith Pattemore0University of Otago, ChristchurchTobacco exposure increases mortality and morbidity of the fetus, the child, the adolescent, and their children in turn. Nearly half the children in the world are exposed. Smoking is not merely personal choice or personal responsibility; those subtle phrases undermine those who have no choice in the matter.Tobacco control must take a multi-pronged attack. Smoking cessation by adults in childbearing years must take centre stage of these efforts, because it is the only way to ensure a smoke-free environment for children. Smoke-free parents provide a role model for smoke-free young people, and erode the image of smoking as a desirable adult behaviour to emulate. Pediatricians and pediatric pulmonologists have a key role to play here. This goal will reduce morbidity and mortality among adults and children. Legislation regarding taxation, environments, tobacco constituents, product placement and display, packaging, and media education are all key to this core goal. Smokefree policy must be protected from attack based on trade agreements.Research is needed into more effective ways to attract and help people give up smoking, and into educating and re-deploying tobacco industry workers in emerging and developed countries.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fped.2013.00020/fullEthicsTobaccoChildrenpassive smokingenvironmental riskpersonal choice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philip Keith Pattemore
spellingShingle Philip Keith Pattemore
Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
Frontiers in Pediatrics
Ethics
Tobacco
Children
passive smoking
environmental risk
personal choice
author_facet Philip Keith Pattemore
author_sort Philip Keith Pattemore
title Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
title_short Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
title_full Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
title_fullStr Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
title_full_unstemmed Tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
title_sort tobacco or healthy children: the two cannot co-exist
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Pediatrics
issn 2296-2360
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Tobacco exposure increases mortality and morbidity of the fetus, the child, the adolescent, and their children in turn. Nearly half the children in the world are exposed. Smoking is not merely personal choice or personal responsibility; those subtle phrases undermine those who have no choice in the matter.Tobacco control must take a multi-pronged attack. Smoking cessation by adults in childbearing years must take centre stage of these efforts, because it is the only way to ensure a smoke-free environment for children. Smoke-free parents provide a role model for smoke-free young people, and erode the image of smoking as a desirable adult behaviour to emulate. Pediatricians and pediatric pulmonologists have a key role to play here. This goal will reduce morbidity and mortality among adults and children. Legislation regarding taxation, environments, tobacco constituents, product placement and display, packaging, and media education are all key to this core goal. Smokefree policy must be protected from attack based on trade agreements.Research is needed into more effective ways to attract and help people give up smoking, and into educating and re-deploying tobacco industry workers in emerging and developed countries.
topic Ethics
Tobacco
Children
passive smoking
environmental risk
personal choice
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fped.2013.00020/full
work_keys_str_mv AT philipkeithpattemore tobaccoorhealthychildrenthetwocannotcoexist
_version_ 1725694496610451456