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Passive smoke in workplace increases Lung
Cancer risk
Newswise — An analysis of nearly two dozen
studies confirms the association between
passive smoke in the workplace and an
increased risk of lung cancer, according to
a report in the American Journal of Public
Health.
The research, led by University of Illinois
at Chicago epidemiologist Leslie Stayner, is
posted online and will appear in the March
print issue of the journal.
Stayner and colleagues conducted a
statistical analysis combining data from 22
studies evaluating workplace smoking
exposure and lung cancer risk. They also
analyzed workers' level and duration of
exposure to passive smoke and their risk of
lung cancer.
The researchers found a 24 percent increase
in lung cancer risk among people exposed to
passive smoke in the workplace. Workers who
were highly exposed had a 100 percent
increased (or doubled) risk of lung cancer,
and workers with a long history, or
duration, of exposure to passive smoke had a
50 percent increased risk.
"We believe this provides the strongest
evidence to date of the relationship between
workplace environmental tobacco smoke and
lung cancer," said Stayner, professor and
director of epidemiology and biostatistics
at the UIC School of Public Health, and lead
author of the study.
The research, Stayner said, has important
policy implications for cities and states
that have not yet legislated smoking bans in
bars and restaurants where there are high
levels of environmental smoke.
Co-authors include James Bena of the
Cleveland Clinic Foundation; Annie Sascoof
the Victor Ségalen Bordeaux 2 University in
France; Randall Smith of the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health, Cincinnati; Kyle Steenland of Emory
University; Michaela Kreuzer of the GSF-National
Research Centre for Environment and Health
in Neuherberg, Germany; and Kurt Straif, of
the International Agency for Research on
Cancer, Lyons, France.
UIC ranks among the nation's top 50
universities in federal research funding and
is Chicago's largest university with 25,000
students, 12,000 faculty and staff, 15
colleges and the state's major public
medical center. A hallmark of the campus is
the Great Cities Commitment, through which
UIC faculty, students and staff engage with
community, corporate, foundation and
government partners in hundreds of programs
to improve the quality of life in
metropolitan areas around the world
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