We all know that smoking has a serious danger to our health. You can judge whether to smoke based on sufficient information, but please do accept smoking when it comes to late cancer or heart disease or other adverse effects later. But what about exposure to second-hand smoke? At this point, we do not always have the option of contacting other people's smoke. The Surgeon's Office (OGS) records high-level secondhand smoke exposure in non-smoking adults and children in the United States.
We have heard that passive smoking has been exposed for many years, but legalization of marijuana in some states raises concerns about smoking in secondhand smoke. These concerns come from two perspectives. One is a health problem. Is secondhand smoke exposure of cannabis adversely affecting the health of exposed non-users? Furthermore, for those who smoke smokers who do not smoke marijuana, does this exposure affect drug testing? Is the marijuana cigarette being used dangerous or is second-smoke smoke disturbing your drug test? All these are important issues
Secondhand smoke is a mixture of smoke from the burning of tobacco products (tobacco, cigars, pipes etc.) and smoke exhaled by smokers. Secondhand smoking is also known as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). Exposure to secondhand smoke may be referred to as involuntary or passive smoking. Passive smoking, classified as Group A carcinogens by EPA, contains over 7,000 substances. Secondhand smoke exposure usually occurs indoors, especially in homes and cars. Secondhand smoke may move between the room and the apartment. Secondhand smoking is not prevented even if you open the window or increase the ventilation in the car or in the house.
Secondhand smoke is a combination of burning smoke from cigarettes and smoke exhaling by smokers. There are two types of sidestream smoke; sidestream smoke comes directly from burning tobacco products, and mainstream smoke is smoke smoked by smokers. Because it does not have a filter to pass through, smoke burning from the edge of cigarettes and cigars actually contains more harmful substances than smoke smoked by smokers. If you are a non smoker, but your body is exposed to secondhand smoke, your body still absorbs nicotine and other harmful substances. Smoke contains more than 4000 compounds, 250 of which are toxic and more than 50 are known carcinogens. These dangerous substances will remain in the air for about 4 hours, and inhaling these particles will injure you in just a few minutes.