(Press-News.org) Non-smokers should give hotels that allow smoking in certain rooms a wide berth, say the authors, and instead choose completely smoke free hotels.
The researchers analysed the surfaces and air quality of rooms for evidence of tobacco smoke pollution (nicotine and 3EP), known as third hand smoke, in a random sample of budget to mid-range hotels in San Diego, California.
Ten hotels in the sample operated complete bans and 30 operated partial smoking bans, providing designated non-smoking rooms.
Non-smokers who spent the night at any of the hotels, provided urine and finger wipe samples to assess their exposure to nicotine and a cancer causing agent found specifically in tobacco smoke - known as NKK - as measured by their metabolites cotinine and NNAL.
The findings showed that smoking in hotels left a legacy of tobacco pollution in both smoking and non-smoking rooms. A partial smoking ban did not protect the occupants of non-smoking rooms from exposure to tobacco pollution.
Compared with hotels operating total smoking bans, surface nicotine and air 3EP levels were higher in both non-smoking and smoking rooms of hotels operating partial bans.
Surface nicotine levels were more than twice as high in non-smoking rooms of hotels operating partial bans as those of hotels operating total smoking bans (3.7 µg/m2 compared with 1.4 µg/m2), while air levels of 3EP were more than 7 times as high.
Surface and air nicotine levels in rooms where previous guests had smoked were 35 and 22 times higher than those of rooms in hotels operating a total smoking ban.
Air nicotine levels in smoking rooms were significantly higher than in non-smoking rooms; and they were also higher 40% higher in non-smoking rooms of hotels operating partial smoking bans than in those operating total bans.
Similarly, hallway surfaces outside smoking rooms also showed higher nicotine levels than those outside non-smoking rooms.
Non-smokers who stayed in hotels with partial smoking bans also had higher levels of finger nicotine and urinary cotinine than those staying in hotels operating total bans. Urinary NNAL was also significantly higher in those staying in the 10 rooms containing the highest levels of tobacco pollutants.
"Our findings demonstrate that some non-smoking guest rooms in smoking hotels are as polluted with [third hand smoke] as are some smoking rooms," write the authors. They go on to say: "Moreover, non-smoking guests staying in smoking rooms may be exposed to tobacco smoke pollutants at levels found among non-smokers exposed to second hand smoke."
Few countries have adopted a smoking ban that includes hotels, say the authors, but their findings "suggest that it is time to abandon smoke-free exemptions for hotels," they write.
New hotels should operate total smoking bans to protect not only their guests, but also their employees, say the authors. In the meantime, they advise: "Guests who wish to protect themselves from exposure to tobacco smoke should avoid hotels that permit smoking and instead stay in completely smoke-free hotels."
### END
Non-smoking hotel rooms still expose occupants to tobacco smoke
Non-smokers should shun hotels operating partial smoking bans, advise authors
2013-05-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Living close to major road may impair kidney function
2013-05-14
The authors base their findings on more than 1100 adults who had sustained a stroke between 1999 and 2004 and had been admitted to hospital in the greater Boston area of Massachusetts in the US.
On admission, each patient's serum creatinine was measured. This is a by-product of muscle metabolism and is filtered out of the body by the kidney, known as the glomerular filtration rate or GFR. The GFR is therefore an indicator of the health of the kidneys and how well they are working.
Half the patients lived within 1 km of a major road, with the rest living between 1 and ...
Salt levels in food still dangerously high
2013-05-14
CHICAGO --- The dangerously high salt levels in processed food and fast food remain essentially unchanged, despite numerous calls from public and private health agencies for the food industry to voluntarily reduce sodium levels, reports a new Northwestern Medicine study conducted with the Center for Science in the Public Interest.
The study, which will be published May 13 in JAMA Internal Medicine, assessed the sodium content in selected processed foods and in fast-food restaurants in 2005, 2008 and 20011. The main finding was that the sodium content of food is as ...
Individual and small-chain restaurant meals exceed recommended daily calorie needs
2013-05-14
BOSTON, MA (EMBARGOED UNTIL Monday, May 13, 2013, 4pm EDT) – As the restaurant industry prepares to implement new rules requiring chains with 20 or more locations to post calorie content information, the results of a new study suggest that it would be beneficial to public health for all restaurants to provide consumers with the nutritional content of their products. Researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University analyzed meals from independent and small-chain restaurants, which account for approximately 50% of the ...
Productivity increases with species diversity
2013-05-14
Environments containing species that are distantly related to one another are more productive than those containing closely related species, according to new research from the University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC).
The experimental result from Marc William Cadotte confirms a prediction made by Charles Darwin in On the Origin of Species, first published in 1859. Darwin had said that a plot of land growing distantly related grasses would be more productive than a plot with a single species of grass.
Since then, many experiments have shown that multi-species plots are ...
Study defines level of dengue virus needed for transmission
2013-05-14
Researchers have identified the dose of dengue virus in human blood that is required to infect mosquitoes when they bite. Mosquitoes are essential for transmitting the virus between people so the findings have important implications for understanding how to slow the spread of the disease.
By defining the threshold of the amount of virus needed for transmission, the research also provides a target that experimental dengue vaccines and drugs must prevent the virus from reaching in order to be successful at preventing the spread of disease during natural infection.
Dengue, ...
Receptor proteins could hold clues to antibiotic resistance in MRSA
2013-05-14
Scientists at Imperial College London have identified four new proteins that act as receptors for an essential signalling molecule in bacteria such as MRSA.
The receptors are thought to play an important role in enabling bacteria to respond to their environment. Their discovery provides scientists with vital clues in the hunt for new antibiotics, which are increasingly in need as bacteria become resistant to existing treatments.
The bacterium Staphylococcus aureus causes life-threatening diseases in hospital patients and in previously healthy people. Methicillin-resistant ...
Scientists find impact of open-ocean industrial fishing within centuries of bird bones
2013-05-14
The impact of industrial fishing on coastal ecosystems has been studied for many years. But how it affects food webs in the open ocean―a vast region that covers almost half of the Earth's surface―has not been very clear. So a team of Smithsonian and Michigan State University scientists and their colleagues looked to the ancient bones of seabirds for answers, revealing some of the dramatic changes that have happened within open-ocean food webs since the onset of industrial fishing. The team's research is published this week in the Proceedings of the National ...
Study identifies possible new acute leukemia marker, treatment target
2013-05-14
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A study has identified microRNA-155 as a new independent prognostic marker and treatment target in patients with acute myeloid leukemia that has normal-looking chromosomes under the microscope (that is, cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia, or CN-AML).
The study was led by researchers at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James). The researchers found that when microRNA-155 (miR-155) is present at abnormally high levels in CN-AML cells, patients ...
Grammar errors? The brain detects them even when you are unaware
2013-05-14
EUGENE, Ore. -- (May 13, 2013) -- Your brain often works on autopilot when it comes to grammar. That theory has been around for years, but University of Oregon neuroscientists have captured elusive hard evidence that people indeed detect and process grammatical errors with no awareness of doing so.
Participants in the study -- native-English speaking people, ages 18-30 –- had their brain activity recorded using electroencephalography, from which researchers focused on a signal known as the Event-Related Potential (ERP). This non-invasive technique allows for the capture ...
Breakthrough in how pancreatic cancer cells ingest nutrients points to new drug target
2013-05-14
In a landmark cancer study published online in Nature, researchers at NYU School of Medicine have unraveled a longstanding mystery about how pancreatic tumor cells feed themselves, opening up new therapeutic possibilities for a notoriously lethal disease with few treatment options. Pancreatic cancer kills nearly 38,000 Americans annually, making it a leading cause of cancer death. The life expectancy for most people diagnosed with it is less than a year.
Now new research reveals a possible chink in the armor of this recalcitrant disease. Many cancers, including pancreatic, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Jill Tarter to receive Inaugural Tarter Award for Innovation in the search for life beyond earth
Survey finds continued declines in HIV clinician workforce
Researchers home in on tumor vulnerabilities to improve odds of treating glioblastoma
Awareness of lung cancer screening remains low
Hospital COVID-19 burden and adverse event rates
NSF NOIRLab astronomers discover the fastest-feeding black hole in the early universe
Translational science reviews—a new JAMA review
How the keto diet could one day treat autoimmune disorders
Influence of tool corner radius on chip geometrical characteristics of machining Zr-based bulk metallic glass
Megan Huisingh-Scheetz, MD, MPH, of the University of Chicago recognized with AFAR’s Terrie Fox Wetle Rising Star Award in Health Services and Aging Research
Steven N. Austad, PhD, to receive inaugural George M. Martin Lifetime Achievement in Mentoring Award
Jeremy D. Walston, MD, of Johns Hopkins University to receive AFAR 2024 Irving S. Wright Award of Distinction
SwRI receives $23 million in U.S. Air Force contracts to sustain aging aircraft
Insilico Medicine enters into revolving loan facility of up to US$100 Million with HSBC
Security in quantum computing
Noninvasive choroidal vessel analysis via deep learning: A new approach to choroidal optical coherence tomography angiography
National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards $1M to Case Western Reserve University researchers to study new approach to treat the disease
Virginia Tech researchers find menthol restrictions may drive smokers to healthier alternatives
Japanese study reveals the importance of new overtime restrictions on physician’s mental health
Space: A new frontier for exploring stem cell therapy
History of concussion linked to higher risk of severe mental illness after childbirth
Combining two simple tools could combat election misinformation
Nanoscale transistors could enable more efficient electronics
UChicago scientist develops paradigm to predict behavior of atmospheric rivers
Childhood overweight is associated with socio-economic vulnerability
Study reveals links between many pesticides and prostate cancer
LiU researchers make AlphaFold predict very large proteins
Fossil of huge terror bird offers new information about wildlife in South America 12 million years ago
Scientists create a world-first 3D cell model to help develop treatments for devastating lip injuries
One-third of patients with cancer visit EDs in months before diagnosis
[Press-News.org] Non-smoking hotel rooms still expose occupants to tobacco smokeNon-smokers should shun hotels operating partial smoking bans, advise authors