SECONDHAND SMOKE TIED TO HIGHER BIRTH DEFECT RISK



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Women exposed to second-hand smoke while pregnant are more likely to experience a stillbirth or have babies with birth defects, according to an analysis.

Stillbirth was 23 per cent more common and birth defects were 13 per cent more common among women who lived or worked with smokers, according to a report published in Pediatrics.

'Women need to be protected from passive smoke exposure before conception and throughout pregnancy,' said Jo Leonardi-Bee, a professor at the University of Nottingham in England and one of the authors of the study, in an email to Reuters Health.

Although the increased risks of stillbirth and birth defects are not massive, she warned: 'They are a lot larger in magnitude than one would anticipate if we believe that passive smoke only has one percent of the effect of active smoking.' Prof Leonardi-Bee and her colleagues combined data from 19 studies that looked at the effects of sceondhand smoke on the rates of miscarriage, newborn death and birth defects.

The rates of miscarriage and newborn death were similar whether or not women were exposed to secondhand smoke, and when looked at individually, no single birth defect was linked to secondhand smoke. Only when the researchers pooled the data on all birth defects did they see an increased risk.

None of the women smoked while pregnant, but they breathed in secondhand smoke from colleagues or family members. In half the studies analysed, fathers were the primary source of secondhand smoke.

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