Smoking in Public Places: Health & Economic Effects

 Health effects
“Smoking increases the risk of common diseases affecting the heart and lungs such as heart attacks, strokes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, and cancer (particularly lung cancer, cancers of the larynx and mouth, and pancreatic cancer” (Stanley 28).These account just for a few health complications associated with smoking. On the other hand smokers argue that smoking liberates tension and relaxes the mind. Some argue that smoking substances like tobacco have the benefit of higher human information processing, healthy body weight, less chance of plague gingival inflammation, hypertension, Parkinson’s disease among others.

What about the nonsmoker? He/she becomes a secondhand smoker exposed to the same health risks as the smokers. Pregnant women, young children, people with asthma and other none smokers unknowingly become victims of the risks in public places.

Social effects
Smoking especially tobacco has in the past been used as part of image by famous scientists like Albert Einstein’s, news broadcaster Edward R. Murrow’s, author Kurt Vonnegut, politicians like British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Winston Churchill among others (Stanley 31).However health organizations and government institutions have increased efforts to reduce the number of smokers by conducting anti-smoking campaigns, higher taxations on smoked substances and banning smoking in public places. They expose negative social effects associated with smoking like bad breath, smelly clothes, and tainted teeth with the aim of reducing the status quo which smokers are held especially by young adolescents who join smoking ignorantly to achieve a status quo.

Economic effects
Smoked substances are a source of revenue to the government. Smoking ban in public places like bars and restaurant could hurt them economically. “I found a statistically significant result that the proposed smoking bans lowered the market value of hospitality industry firms” (Tomlin 18). This reduces revenue to the government from smoked substances. However to the smoker it helps reduce the chances of smoking which in the long run results to less spending. The government also stands to gain from revenues collected from fines collected from offenders of the ban

Conclusion
Smokers have their rights to smoke but everyone has the right to clean air. Smoking in public places should then be banned due to the health risks it poses to both the smokers and non-smokers. It neither raises ones status nor is it a show of sophistication. It instead leaves the smoker with smelly clothes, bad breath, stained teeth and irritated eyes. The economic effect of the ban could be counteracted by investing in other economic activities that are friendlier to the human beings.

Works cited
Jacob, Jack. Tobacco:A study of its consumption in the United States. Calorina: Pitman Publishing Company, 2000. Print. 


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