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Science

Ban smoking in cars with kids, health lobbies say

Canadian health lobbies are joing the international push to ban smoking in cars when there are children present.

Several Canadian health lobby groups are joining the international push to ban smoking in cars when there are children present.

While some provinces British Columbia and Ontario have been cool to the idea,Nova Scotia's adoption of the banin December prompted "a groundswell of change across Canada," Rob Cunningham, a policy analyst for the Canadian Cancer Society, said in anews release on Jan. 16.

Majority of smokers favour ban

The same day, the society released a poll indicatingthat:

  • Most Canadians (82 per cent) support banning smoking in vehicles with children younger than 18.
  • Even69 per cent of smokers support such a ban.

Janice Willett, head of the Ontario Medical Association, saidTuesday that with smokers in the car, children are being put at risk ofheart disease, infections and asthma.

The association recommended a ban in a 2004 position paper, which pointed to a Colorado study that suggested tobacco smoke in cars is 23 times more toxic than smoke in houses, because cars have a muchsmaller volume.

Aside from the Cancer Society, other health organizations and lobby groupsas well as some individuals and communities are working to promote the ban:

  • Ontario Liberal MPP David Orazietti introduced a private member's bill in December to ban smoking in vehicles when children are inside.
  • The Peterborough (Ont.) County-City Health Unit started an online petition Monday to support Orazietti's bill.
  • A poll done in December for the Ontario Tobacco-Free Network reported results similar to those of theCancer Society poll.

Ont., B.C. not open to new law

OntarioPremier Dalton McGuinty and B.C. Health Minister George Abbott have both rejected the idea.

"I think that's a major step forward and not a step I'm prepared to take at this time," Abbott said in November.

Laws banning smoking in vehicles with children have been passed in California, Arkansas, Louisiana, Puerto Rico, some U.S. cities, and the Australian states of South Australia and Tasmania, the Cancer Society said.

Other jurisdictions are also considering the idea, it said.

The societys survey of 2,032 adult Canadians wasdone by telephone between Dec. 12, 2007, and Jan. 3, 2008. The sample is considered accurate to within plus or minus 2.2 percentage points19 times out of 20.

With files from the Canadian Press