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Secondhand smoke is associated with increased illnesses in children, including lower respiratory disease, middle ear effusion, asthma and sudden infant death syndrome. One study found that the overall cancer risk was greater for individuals exposed to environmental tobacco smoke during both childhood and adulthood than for individuals with a history of exposure during only one of those periods.

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Addictions: Substance Abuse: Tobacco: Secondhand Smoke: Effects on Children: Clinical Briefs - American Family Physician, July 1997  Previous Next
 

Clinical Briefs - American Family Physician, July 1997


Secondhand smoke is associated with increased illnesses in children, including lower respiratory disease, middle ear effusion, asthma and sudden infant death syndrome. One study found that the overall cancer risk was greater for individuals exposed to environmental tobacco smoke during both childhood and adulthood than for individuals with a history of exposure during only one of those periods.


http://www.aafp.org/afp/970700ap/briefs9.html.


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