Smoking outdoors in order to protect your children from the ill effects of smoking does not actually protect them.
A new Australian study has found that smoking outside the home doesn't really protect your offspring from passive smoking.Researchers from Curtin University of Technology measured nicotine and respirable particles over 24 hours in the living rooms of 92 Perth households with children aged between four and nine years old.
They found that even if parents only smoked outside, the levels of respirable suspended particles, including nicotine, were significantly higher in their homes.
Lead researcher Dr Krassi Rumchev, says the findings are important because they indicate that smoking outdoors may not be enough to safeguard kids from the effects of environmental tobacco smoke, reports ABC Online.
"According to the study, smoking outdoors seems inadequate to protect children," she said.
"[The] results demonstrate clearly that if parents want a smoke-free environment for children, they need to stop smoking."
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"When people come inside they're still breathing out smoke and it contaminates the air. It's enough to do harm," Rumchev says.
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The findings appear in the latest issue of Indoor Air.
Source-ANI
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