Smoking bans cut overall heart disease risk

An IOM report highlights how reducing secondhand smoke can lower threats to cardiovascular health.

By Christine S. Moyer, amednews staff. Posted Nov. 2, 2009.


Smoking bans reduce the risk of heart attacks and heart disease associated with even limited exposure to secondhand smoke, says a report from the Institute of Medicine.

The report focused on an analysis of data from 11 different epidemiological studies, which examined changes in heart-attack rates after smoking bans were implemented in U.S. communities, as well as in Canada, Italy and Scotland. Two studies specifically assessed the association between secondhand smoke exposure and heart attacks.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which sponsored the report, aimed to address debate in the scientific community about the link between the enactment of smoking bans and the decrease in heart attack rates, said Matthew McKenna, MD, MPH, director of the CDC Office on Smoking and Health.

Stephen E. Fienberg, PhD, a member of the IOM committee that conducted the study and a professor of statistics and social science at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said he was among the skeptics who believed that short-term exposure to secondhand smoke could create an excess of heart attacks. But the data in the report changed his mind.

The IOM report found that in both case-control and cohort studies, even limited exposure to secondhand smoke increased the risk of heart disease by 25% to 30%. Each of the 11 analyzed studies indicated a decrease in the rate of heart attacks after smoking bans were implemented. Decreases ranged from 6% to 47%, depending on the study and the form of analysis.

The key messages for cardiologists and primary care doctors are informing their patients about the new findings and advocating public smoking bans, Dr. McKenna said. "When counseling patients about medicine, not smoking and getting their blood pressure under control ... [doctors] need to tell them there is a risk going into a room with tobacco smoke in it. They're putting their lives at risk."

Elizabeth Ross, MD, a Washington, D.C.-based cardiologist and American Heart Assn. spokeswoman, said she hopes the report will create more public policy and legislation expanding smoking bans in public places.

Mary Anne McCaffree, MD, a member of the American Medical Association Board of Trustees, called the report "a wake-up call to smokers."

"We hope the information in this report will encourage smokers to quit -- if not for themselves, then for their families," Dr. McCaffree said.

The AMA has tools and resources to help physicians address the health implications of secondhand smoke with their patients, as well as with the parents of their pediatric patients.

There are individual studies and reviews under way that examine the relationship between various levels of tobacco smoke and heart disease, Dr. McKenna said.

"The take-home message is there's no amount of exposure to cigarette smoke that's safe," Dr. Ross said.

The print version of this content appeared in the Nov 9, 2009 issue of American Medical News.


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