Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Learn mandarin - Ban smoking in public places

Opinion / Li Xing

Ban smoking in public places

By Li Xing (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-05-31 06:58

I stayed outside the operating room of a hospital in Beijing for five
hours on Tuesday while the daughter of my close friend was undergoing
open-heart surgery. Groups of five other families - some with as many as
six or seven members - were also there, waiting for the outcome of their
loved ones' surgery.

Since there is no special waiting room, all of us were crowded into a
corridor linking the hospital wards for patients recovering from
everything from bone fractures to urinary disease.

In five hours, I counted some 10 people - patients and their relatives -
lighting up cigarettes and smoking right in the corridor or the stairways
inside the hospital, oblivious to the huge glaring No-Smoking sign.

One patient wobbled out of the urinary ward with a burning cigarette in
his left hand. His feet swollen, he walked only a few steps before
spotting a vacant seat in the corridor. He sat down and continued puffing
out smoke. Stunned, we all stared at him.

The elderly woman from Zhengzhou in Central China's Henan Province
started coughing. But the man was just oblivious. Picking up her courage,
the woman, whose husband was undergoing heart bypass surgery, told him to
stop smoking.

"My husband never smokes," she told me. "I cough whenever I inhale
secondhand smoke."

However, the man with swollen feet persisted, as rings of smoke flowed
from his mouth. My husband and I as well as a few others joined the
elderly woman in protest.

"You should have the good sense to smoke outside the hospital building
instead of here among the non-smokers," I told him sternly.

Slowly, he got up and wobbled on into a side corridor to continue burning
the last bit of his cigarette.

The way the man acted indicated how hard a battle we must fight on behalf
of the 540 million Chinese exposed to secondhand smoke (SHS).

I don't think the man and the others who couldn't resist lighting up even
inside a hospital are ignorant of the risks involved.

A national tobacco control report released on Tuesday sounded a loud
alarm. Among those suffering from SHS, 180 million are under the age of
15. Besides children, women are also particularly susceptible to SHS, and
about 100,000 of the 1 million Chinese who die each year from
smoking-related diseases are the victims of second-hand smoke.

Of all the public places, hospitals should be the first smoke-free
sanctuary, for the obvious reason that people not in good health are
especially vulnerable to tobacco smoke.

This is supported by a 2006 study in seven cities in which 78.1 percent
of non-smokers and even 75.5 percent of smokers supported banning smoking
inside hospitals.

Some smokers are able to control themselves in public places and they do
manage to withhold the urge to smoke for five hours while waiting outside
an operating room. But what to do with people like the man with swollen
feet and the few others I encountered just outside the operating room?

Aside from effective legislation and regulation, there should be
effective enforcement. Hospitals especially should place patrols in
critical places to stop people from lighting up cigarattes - both
patients and visitors.

More importantly, the people who support smoke-free public places should
unite to create intense public pressure and force smokers to refrain from
lighting up in public.

E-mail: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily 05/31/2007 page10)

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