Children
from homes where family members smoke take more time off school with
coughs and colds, according to research.
A study of almost 2,000 pupils at schools in southern California
showed some were up to four times more likely to miss classes due to
respiratory illness than those from smoke-free homes.
The finding comes just days after the British Medical Journal
published a controversial paper questioning the risks of passive
smoking.
Anti-smoking groups reacted angrily to the publication of the BMJ
study - partly funded by the tobacco industry - which suggested the
link with heart disease and lung cancer was considerably weaker than
thought.
A spokesman for the charity Action on Smoking and Health told the
BBC the latest research confirmed the social as well as physical
damage that passive smoking causes.
"It does not surprise us at all that it affects not only
children's health but their development as well," said researcher
Naj Dehlavi.
"We already know that around 17,000 children a year under the age
of five end up being hospitalised with problems like glue ear or
respiratory complications as a direct result of passive smoking."
Little research
Although the impact on the health of young children is well
known, little research has been carried out to see if their
education is affected too.
Researchers from the Keck School of Medicine at the University of
Southern California studied 1,932 fourth grade pupils and questioned
each one on whether their parents or other family members smoked.
Records were then examined to see which children had been off
school with chest problems in the previous six months.
The results, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology,
showed kids from smoking homes were at least 27 per cent more likely
to have been off sick.
The risks rose considerably if there was more than one smoker and
if the child had a history of asthma.
For example, asthmatic pupils with two or smokers at home were
four times more likely to need time off than healthy youngsters
whose parents were non-smokers.
Dr Frank Gilliland, who led the research, said: "Environmental
tobacco smoke exposure is associated with increased
respiratory-related school absenteeism among children, especially
those with asthma."
A spokeswoman for the UK's National Asthma Campaign said other
studies showed the incidence of asthma is increased by 60 per cent
in children of smokers in the UK.
She added: "We would encourage any parent whose child has asthma
to keep them away from smoky atmospheres as this can be harmful to
growing lungs."