Secondhand Smoke’s Effect on Kids
Today is a historic day for North Carolina as the no-smoking laws goes into effect. Even if you as parents don’t smoke, your baby or toddler can still suffer from secondhand smoke. Read the article below. Secondhand smoke threatens everyone who inhales it, especially kids. Many young children live in a house with a smoker, and the result is an increased risk for health problems. Secondhand smoke refers not only to the smoke given off by the burning end of a cigarette, pipe or cigar, but also to the smoke exhaled by smokers. The California Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that 3,400 nonsmokers die of lung cancer each year because of secondhand smoke. It also causes 22,700 to 69,600 deaths from heart disease in nonsmokers. It’s so harmful the EPA labels it a Group A carcinogen, the category for the most harmful cancer-causing agents. According to the Centers for





































