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LETTER: 4,000 lives saved by smoking ban

May 29th, 2016 10:00 PM

By Southern Star Team

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SIR – The Faculty of Public Health Medicine at the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland is alarmed and deeply concerned at any suggestion that Ireland’s legislation on workplace smoking might be weakened and undermined.

SIR – The Faculty of Public Health Medicine at the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland is alarmed and deeply concerned at any suggestion that Ireland’s legislation on workplace smoking might be weakened and undermined.

We view it as a most retrograde and devastating step in trying to make Ireland tobacco free by 2025 – a plan that was launched by the Minister for Health in 2013.

The introduction of the Workplace Smoking Ban in 2004 was a pioneering move. Since its introduction, the level of smoking has fallen in this country by almost 10% and some 4,000 lives saved.

It has also contributed to a reduction of the cost of smoking-related illness – the direct healthcare costs alone are still costing in excess of €500 million.

There is no ambiguity around the lethal effects of Tobacco: it is an addictive drug that kills when used as intended.

Tobacco smoke affects virtually every organ in the body. 

One of every two people who smoke long-term will die from a smoking-related disease.

The health effects are not only limited to smokers but exposure to secondhand smoke also damages health.

Secondhand tobacco smoke contains many poisons, including nicotine (a pesticide), carbon monoxide, ammonia, formaldehyde, hydrogen cyanide, nitrogen oxides, phenol, sulphur dioxide, and others.

Evidence shows that exposure to secondhand smoke increases the risk of serious medical conditions, such as lung cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease and sudden infant death syndrome.

The Faculty calls on the Government to continue to commit to making tobacco addiction a thing of the past by providing strong and responsible leadership.

Yours sincerely,

Prof Elizabeth Keane,

Dean of the Faculty of 

Public Health Medicine, 

Royal College of

 Physicians of Ireland, 

Dublin 2.

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