Secondhand Smoke and Electronic-Cigarette Aerosols
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Related pages:
- Secondhand Tobacco Smoke and Indoor Air Quality
- Secondhand Electronic-Cigarette Aerosol and Indoor Air Quality
- Secondhand Marijuana Smoke and Indoor Air Quality
- Secondhand Smoke and Electronic-Cigarette Aerosol Resources
Smoking, Vaping and Contaminants Indoors
If you smoke or vape, please do so outdoors, and away from indoor spaces. Doing so will help you, your loved ones, your neighbors, and others nearby.
Smoking tobacco and marijuana — and vaping with electronic cigarettes and similar devices — releases chemicals into the air.
The fumes released from e-cigarettes are called aerosols, which are a mix of tiny particles and/or droplets in the air.
Secondhand Exposure
When a person smokes or vapes, they inhale the chemicals in the product. People around the smoker or vaper are also exposed to these chemicals. This exposure is called secondhand exposure.
The types and amounts of chemicals these products release varies depending on several factors, including:
- The type of product.
- The chemicals in the product.
- How much of the product is used.
- How long the product is used for.
Even after a person stops smoking or vaping, some of the chemicals released can remain indoors for a long time. These chemicals can settle on walls, floors, clothing, upholstery, drapes, bedding, carpets and other surfaces. Over time, these chemicals can react with those surfaces to create other chemicals, and they can also be released back into the air.
Reducing Exposure Indoors
The only way to eliminate secondhand exposure is to prohibit smoking and vaping indoors and near enclosed spaces. Doing so protects human health from any harmful chemicals these products may release.
Ventilation, filtration and air cleaning techniques may reduce these exposures, but they will not eliminate them.
When smoking or e-cigarette use occurs outside, it should be done away from building air intakes, doors, open windows, vehicles, and other enclosed spaces.
Smokefree policies in homes, schools, offices, vehicles and other enclosed spaces improve indoor air quality when they are comprehensive and effectively implemented. Smokefree policies for tobacco smoke products have been extensively researched. These policies have many benefits, including improving human health, reducing health care costs for smokers and those exposed to secondhand smoke, and reducing fire risk.
Many smokefree policies pre-date the increased use of e-cigarette and marijuana products. Similarities between some potentially harmful chemicals released from marijuana and e-cigarettes and those released from traditional tobacco smoke products may point toward expanding smokefree policies to eliminate indoor use of e-cigarette and marijuana products.
Research regarding smokefree policies that include marijuana or e-cigarette products is relatively limited. More research is needed to better understand the range of potential benefits of such policies.