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Smoking ban spreads across college campuses

Ashley Cook

Issue date: 3/22/07 Section: News
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Nearly 31 percent of full-time college students smoke, but a full ban could bar students from smoking on campus. Smoking on most campuses, including Cabrini, is already prohibited inside and 30 feet around dorms.
Media Credit: Orlando Sentinel/MCT
Nearly 31 percent of full-time college students smoke, but a full ban could bar students from smoking on campus. Smoking on most campuses, including Cabrini, is already prohibited inside and 30 feet around dorms.

At least 43 colleges have gone smoke-free from California to New Jersey, according to USA Today. Nearly 31 percent of full-time college students smoke, compared with about 25 percent of the overall population, according to the federal government's 2005 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Smoking is being banned everywhere on these campuses, even in the main quads and sidewalks.

"It's a public policy for the greater good," Christine Hyson, director of health and wellness education, said. " It's a public health issue because it infects others."

Smoking on most campuses, including Cabrini, already is prohibited inside and 30 feet around dorms. A full ban could bar students from smoking on campus or in dorm parking lots also.

A major problem with smoking on campus is the health issues related to second-hand smoke.

"Second-hand smoke is a real health risk particularly in younger people." Hyson said. "Whatever you can do to limit it helps to prevent a higher risk."

C. Everett Koop, former surgeon general of the United States, once said that nicotine has an addictiveness similar to that of heroin or cocaine. College students today have fallen prisoner to this threatening addiction. With that in mind, recent steps have been taken in order to restrain this habit.

"Students underestimate the power of addiction, and how it becomes woven into their daily life," Hyson said.

Eastern University is already one campus that is smoke-free. Schools such as Neumann College have pavilions meant for smokers, but these pavilions aren't all that safe because of the amount of second-hand smoke.

"Where am I supposed to smoke," Michael Dignen, a junior graphic design major, said.

For smokers, if this ban does infact come into effect, they will just have to smoke off campus.

Philip Morris USA, the leading cigarette manufacturer in the United States, declares second-hand smoke from cigarettes causes disease, including lung cancer, heart disease, asthma and respiratory infections. Public health officials also believe that the conclusions of public health officials concerning environmental tobacco smoke are sufficient to warrant measures that regulate smoking in public places.
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