The Effects of Second Hand Smoke
Many smokers have little regard for the discomfort of non smokers
Still, smokers become annoyed and even outraged when a non-smoker asks them to abstain in their presence or move. Parents still smoke in the presence of children (which are known to cause childhood asthma. Co-workers smoke in the doorways of businesses so that everyone who walks through is inundated with smoke. Where it is allowed, people smoke in restaurants even though non-smokers can taste the smoke when attempting to put food in their mouths.
Instetaneous affects of second hand smoke
Last night I was in a smoking environment for 3 hours. Since I chose to be in that environment on my own accord, I did my best to ignore the smoke but moved away from direct contact with it whenever possible. I left there a full 14 hours ago. I woke up this morning noticing the following effects of the second hand smoke, some of which I am still experiencing:
~My hair reeks of the horrible smoke smell even though I washed it before going to bed.
~My bathroom has the same horrible smell, as I left smoke filled clothes in the hamper.
~My eyes are red and my lids are swollen. They are gravelly as well.
~My throat still burns and I am terribly thirsty.
~I woke up with a mild but persistent headache. It still hurts.
Smokers are desensitized to immediate affects of second hand smoke.
These are the immediate affects that being around cigarettes has had on me, a non-smoker. It had been years since I had been around smokers (since my mother died of lung cancer). I suspect daily or chain smoker would be used to these symptoms and have long stopped noticing them. If I feel this lousy after 1 evening in the presence of smokers, it is no wonder that continual exposure to second hand smoke can cause “heart disease and lung cancer in nonsmoking adults and is a known cause of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), respiratory problems, ear infections, and asthma attacks in infants and children,” according to U.S. Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona.