| ADHA Emphasizes Tooth Decay
Prevention for Kids by Reducing Exposure to Secondhand Smoke during
National Children’s Dental Health Month in February
Chicago—January 17, 2007—
According to a new study, supported in part by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ), children who are exposed to secondhand
smoke have a significantly higher rate of tooth decay than children
who do not grow up around smokers. The study is the first in the
United States to associate secondhand, or passive, smoking with
tooth decay, a public health problem that costs an estimated $4.5
billion annually.
Secondhand smoke is a combination of the
smoke from a burning cigarette and the smoke exhaled by the smoker.
Also known as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), it can be recognized
easily by its distinctive odor. ETS contaminates the air and is
retained in clothing, curtains and furniture. Many people find ETS
unpleasant, annoying, and irritating to the eyes and nose. More
importantly, it represents a dangerous health hazard. Over 4,000
different chemicals have been identified in ETS, and at least 43
of these chemicals cause cancer.
“Children exposed to secondhand smoke
are at risk for a multitude of health problems including, as this
study demonstrates, cavities!” says Carol Southard, RSN, MSN,
project consultant for AHDA’s Smoking Cessation Initiative.
“By incorporating the ADHA's Ask. Advise. Refer. model into
practice, dental hygienists can effectively help their clients quit
smoking - thus enhancing the health of their clients as well as
protecting the health of children who would otherwise be exposed
to secondhand smoke.”
“With the release of this study information,
it becomes even more imperative for dental hygienists nationwide
to educate parents, guardians and care takers on the negative effects
of secondhand smoke, as well as to provide helpful instructions
on how to eliminate the preventable and transmissible oral disease
of dental decay" added Marge Green, CDA, RDH, MS, ADHA President.
Between 150,000 and 300,000 children ranging
from 12 to 18 months of age are affected by secondhand smoke each
year. About 15,000 of them are admitted to the hospital with illnesses
like bronchitis and pneumonia. About 300 of these children die from
respiratory problems related to secondhand smoke, including asthma
attacks.
Children exposed to secondhand smoke are
more likely to have reduced lung function and symptoms of respiratory
irritation like coughing, excess phlegm, and wheezing. Passive smoking
can lead to buildup of fluid in the middle ear, the most common
cause of the hospitalization of children requiring an operation.
While the occurrence of dental caries in
children has declined dramatically in the United States, little
headway has been made in reducing caries in children living in poverty,
who generally have less access to dental care and appear to be more
vulnerable to dental decay. Based on data from household interviews
and health examinations of approximately 4,000 children ages 4 to
11 years, the AHRQ study found that children had an increased risk
of tooth decay if they had high levels of cotinine, a by-product
of nicotine that is consistent with secondhand smoke exposure.
According to a recent Surgeon General's
report, dental problems can have substantial consequences including
pain and suffering, problems associated with eating and speaking,
and difficulty learning. It is estimated that dental problems cause
children to miss more than 50 million hours of school time each
year.
ADHA encourages dental hygienists across
the country to get involved with ADHA’s Smoking Cessation
Initiative and to discuss the ill effects of secondhand smoke exposure
in children with their patients. In order to take an important step
in the fight to prevent caries, dental hygienists should educate
their adult patients who smoke on how to quit. For information on
the Smoking Cessation Initiative visit www.askadviserefer.org.
ADHA is the largest national organization
representing the professional interests of the more than 120,000
dental hygienists across the country. Dental hygienists are preventive
oral health professionals, licensed in dental hygiene, who provide
educational, clinical and therapeutic services that support the
total health through the promotion of optimal oral health. For more
information about ADHA, dental hygiene or the link between oral
health and general health, visit ADHA at http://www.adha.org.
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Editor’s Note: Carol
Southard, RN MSN, the Project Consultant for the Smoking Cessation
Initiative, is available for interviews on children’s oral
health and exposure to secondhand smoke as well as tobacco cessation
topics. Please contact Nick Olsen at 312-440-8927 or media@adha.net
to schedule an interview. Check ADHA’s Press Room for press
releases, fact sheets, and backgrounders: http://www.adha.org/media/.
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