Passive smoking
can make kids aggressive and anti-social: study
Kids who are exposed to secondhand
smoke in early childhood are more likely to grow up to be physically aggressive
and antisocial, a new study has warned. Researchers from University of Montreal
in Canada found that aggressive behaviour in kids was linked specifically to
secondhand smoke exposure in childhood regardless of whether they were exposed
during pregnancy or their parents have a history of being antisocial.
"Second-hand smoke is in fact more dangerous
that inhaled smoke, and 40 per cent of children worldwide are exposed to it.
Moreover, exposure to this smoke at early childhood is particularly dangerous,
as the child's brain is still developing," said researcher Linda Pagani.
"I looked at data that was collected about
2,055 kids from their birth until ten years of age, including parent reports
about secondhand smoke exposure and from teachers and children themselves about
classroom behaviour.
"Those having been exposed to secondhand
smoke, even temporarily, were much more likely to report themselves as being
more aggressive by the time they finished fourth grade," Pagani said.
Pagani relied on longitudinal data collected by
Quebec health authorities from birth onward on an annual basis.
Although no direct causal link can be determined,
the statistical correlation suggests that secondhand smoke exposure does
forecast deviant behaviour in later childhood, the study found.
The very detailed information collated for the
Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development enabled Pagani to do something
no other researcher has done to date: distinguish the unique contribution of
secondhand smoke exposure on children's later deviant behaviour.
"Previous studies looking at groups of
children have generally asked mothers whether they smoked or not, and how much
at each follow-up, rather than asking whether someone smoked in the home where
young children live and play," Pagani said.
"Furthermore, few studies have looked at
antisocial behaviour in the parents and even fewer have investigated the
subsequent influence of prolonged exposure to secondhand smoke over the long
term.
"None have taken into account the fact that
disadvantaged families are less likely to participate in a long study like this
one, which of course skews the statistics," Pagani said.
The study was published in the Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health.
(IE)
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