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What Are The Risks Of Lung Cancer From Passive Smoking Or Second-Hand Smoke From E-Cigarettes, And What Can Be Done To Reduce Those Risks?

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saneem | 09:06 Mon 10th Apr 2023 | Body & Soul
11 Answers
Passive smoking, also known as secondhand smoke, is a significant risk factor for lung cancer. When someone inhales smoke from another person's cigarette, they are exposed to the same cancer-causing agents that smokers inhale. In the case of e-cigarettes, the aerosol produced by the device, commonly referred to as "vapor," may contain harmful chemicals, such as formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, that can increase the risk of lung cancer and other health problems. Avoid exposure to secondhand smoke as much as possible. If someone in your household or workplace smokes, encourage them to quit or to smoke outside away from others. If you are in a public place and someone is smoking or using an e-cigarette, try to move away from the source of the smoke or vapor. Improve ventilation in indoor spaces to reduce the concentration of secondhand smoke or vapor in the air. Support policies and regulations that restrict smoking or e-cigarette use in public places and workplaces. If you are a smoker or e-cigarette user, quit smoking or vaping as soon as possible to reduce your own risk of lung cancer and protect those around you. To reduce the risks of lung cancer from passive smoking or secondhand smoke from e-cigarettes, there are several steps that can be taken: The risk of lung cancer from passive smoking varies depending on several factors, including the duration and frequency of exposure, the number of cigarettes smoked by the person around you, and the ventilation in the area. Studies have shown that exposure to secondhand smoke can increase the risk of lung cancer by 20-30%.

To reduce the risks of lung cancer from passive smoking or secondhand smoke from e-cigarettes, there are several steps that can be taken:

1)Avoid exposure to secondhand smoke as much as possible. If someone in your household or workplace smokes, encourage them to quit or to smoke outside away from others.

2) If you are in a public place and someone is smoking or using an e-cigarette, try to move away from the source of the smoke or vapor.

3) Improve ventilation in indoor spaces to reduce the concentration of secondhand smoke or vapor in the air.

4) Support policies and regulations that restrict smoking or e-cigarette use in public places and workplaces.

5) If you are a smoker or e-cigarette user, quit smoking or vaping as soon as possible to reduce your own risk of lung cancer and protect those around you.
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I wish my daughter would listen to me when I plead with her to stop smoking. She won't, even though she can see what it has done to me.
I only stopped smoking when my daughter came home from school sobbing, begging me to stop because her teacher had told her I was going to die.
Wow good for your daughter. More sense than mine. Because she has gone from smoking ordinary cigarettes to these fruity things she says that's as far as she's prepared to go.
One can reduce risks by shooting anyone seen smoking or vaping. Eventually the number of them reduces to zero and all is well.
I would never let a smoker in our house, even those I loved. My Dad was a chain smoker, so obviously I was exposed to his smoke from an early age. I've not smoked a single cigarette in my life. Not even in my wild youth.
Why would anyone in their right mind smoke?
I don't know Hoppy. But years ago people didn't know the dangers. You don't see ashtrays about these days. They used to be in all homes.
I didn't smoke when I started work, but the people I worked with did.
It wasn't long before some of the girls were encouraging me to smoke, and I suppose I didn't want to be left out.
I gave up for the exact reason that Barry did, and I stopped smoking in July 1989.
I think that those of us who have never smoked must have been in the "mind of their own, not easily led" group when younger...and possibly still are!
It breaks my heart when I meet someone struggling for breath, looking so frail and ill and they say to me "I wish I had stopped smoking".
I agree ginge. Always did my own thing, even if it was the wrong thing. I'm still the same!

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