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Passive Smoking and Children - http://members.aol.com/toxicol98/report/page2.htm
Report of an international academic symposium held on August 24-25th, 1998, at the Medical School of Essen University, Germany. |
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Children and Secondhand Smoke - http://www.cancer.ca/ccs/internet/standard/0,3182,3172_13127_262985_langId-en,00.html
Online pamphlet from the Canadian Cancer Society. |
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Passive Smoke "Ruins Child Teeth" - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2844703.stm
Children growing up in a house filled with cigarette smoke are likely to need more visits to the dentist, say researchers. |
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Secondhand Smoke Snuffs Health of Children - http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/news/s_83322.html
Article on program to encourage parents to protect kids from secondhand smoke. |
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Passive Smoke Damage to Children Measured - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2489767.stm
Children who were exposed to secondhand smoke had much higher levels of chemicals in their blood which suggested their blood vessel walls could already be under attack, recent research finds. |
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Secondhand Smoke & Children - http://home.earthlink.net/~jodette/smoke.html
A physician newsletter gives a short treatment to the topic. |
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Passive Smoking: The Impact On Children - http://oldash.org.uk/html/passive/html/kidsbrief.html
ASH-UK report pulls together the latest research to assess how much secondhand smoke children are exposed to, the diseases that this is causing in children, the public awareness of these facts, and educational and policy strategies to reduce this harm. |
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Second Hand Smoke in Pregnancy - http://www.fensende.com/Users/swnymph/refs/smoke.html
Secondhand smoke can hurt unborn babies |
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WHO: Children and Secondhand Smoke - http://www.oldash.org.uk/html/passive/html/who-ets.html
Tobacco Free Initiative, International Consultation on Environmental Tobacco, Smoke (ETS) and Child Health, Geneva Switzerland. Includes summary of the research, exposure levels, effects. |
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Secondhand Smoke May Cause Cavities in Children - http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/pr/news/archive/sec_smoke.html
Children whose parents smoke are more likely to develop dental cavities, according to recent research. |