Passive smoking kills one hospitality employee every week

02 March 2005 by
Passive smoking kills one hospitality employee every week

The British Medical Journal (BMJ) has reported that at least one UK hospitality worker dies every week as a result of passive smoking.

In research published on its website, the BMJ also found that second-hand smoke in all workplaces kills more than two people every working day (617 deaths per year).

The medical publication estimates the total number of UK deaths as a result of passive smoking is 10,950 annually, an average of 30 per day.

The results will lend weight to calls for a total ban on smoking in public places, a move that would go further than Health Secretary John Reid's White Paper proposals.

James Johnson, chairman of the BMJ, told London's Evening Standard: "I don't know how John Reid can continue to serve the public half-measures on health. We need a total ban and we need it now."

Ian Wilmore, a spokesman for the anti-smoking pressure group ASH, told the paper that the mortality rate among hospitality workers was too high a price to pay for indulging a dangerous habit.

by Tom Bill

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