...And Neither Does Second Hand Smoke
© Copyright 2009 All Rights Reserved
This article is a two-in-one. The first is an article written by
Victoria Macdonald, Health Correspondent; the second is written by
FORCES. Both appeared on the FORCES websites and can be viewed there.
The respective links are:http://www.forces.org/articles/files/passive1.htmhttp://www.forces.org/articles/files/who1.htmArticle 1THE
world's leading health organisation has withheld from publication a
study which shows that not only might there be no link between passive
smoking and lung cancer but that it could even have a protective effect.The
astounding results are set to throw wide open the debate on passive
smoking health risks. The World Health Organisation, which commissioned
the 12-centre, seven-country European study has failed to make the
findings public, and has instead produced only a summary of the results
in an internal report.Despite repeated approaches, nobody at
the WHO headquarters in Geneva would comment on the findings last week.
At its International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France,
which coordinated the study, a spokesman would say only that the full
report had been submitted to a science journal and no publication date
had been set.The findings are certain to be an embarrassment to
the WHO, which has spent years and vast sums on anti-smoking and
anti-tobacco campaigns. The study is one of the largest ever to look at
the link between passive smoking - or environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)
- and lung cancer, and had been eagerly awaited by medical experts and
campaigning groups.Yet the scientists have found that there was
no statistical evidence that passive smoking caused lung cancer. The
research compared 650 lung cancer patients with 1,542 healthy people.
It looked at people who were married to smokers, worked with smokers,
both worked and were married to smokers, and those who grew up with
smokers.The results are consistent with their being no
additional risk for a person living or working with a smoker and could
be consistent with passive smoke having a protective effect against
lung cancer. The summary, seen by The Telegraph, also states: "There
was no association between lung cancer risk and ETS exposure during
childhood."A spokesman for Action on Smoking and Health said
the findings "seem rather surprising given the evidence from other
major reviews on the subject which have shown a clear association
between passive smoking and a number of diseases." Roy Castle, the jazz
musician and television presenter who died from lung cancer in 1994,
claimed that he contracted the disease from years of inhaling smoke
while performing in pubs and clubs.A report published in the
British Medical Journal last October was hailed by the anti-tobacco
lobby as definitive proof when it claimed that non-smokers living with
smokers had a 25 per cent risk of developing lung cancer. But
yesterday, Dr Chris Proctor, head of science for BAT Industries, the
tobacco group, said the findings had to be taken seriously. "If this
study cannot find any statistically valid risk you have to ask if there
can be any risk at all."It confirms what we and many other
scientists have long believed, that while smoking in public may be
annoying to some non-smokers, the science does not show that being
around a smoker is a lung-cancer risk." The WHO study results come at a
time when the British Government has made clear its intentions to crack
down on smoking in thousands of public places, including bars and
restaurants.The Government's own Scientific Committee on
Smoking and Health is also expected to report shortly - possibly in
time for this Wednesday's National No Smoking day - on the hazards of
passive smoking.Article 2During March 1988 great
controversy raged over the study conducted by the World Health
Organization. Below we re-print in full the text that appeared on pages
76 and 77 of its report. There then follows an extract from the article
"Behind the Smoke Screen by Victoria Macdonald and Robert Matthews that
appeared in The Sunday Telegraph on 15th March 1998 explaining what the
risks really mean.WHO Report, page 76-77. 3.7.2 Lung cancer and
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (there then follows a list of
those involved in the study - available from FOREST upon request - Ed)"Environmental
tobacco smoke (ETS) is a likely cause of lung cancer [27,37], while
evidence of an association with other neoplasms is inconclusive.
However, the quantitative aspects of the association between ETS
exposure and lung cancer risk are not well established, nor is the
interaction between exposure to ETS and exposure to other carcinogens.
(Ed -- my emphasis).An IARC-coordinated International
collaborative case-control study was aimed at investigating the
relationship between exposure to ETS and to other environmental and
occupational risk factors and the risk of lung cancer in subjects who
have never smoked tobacco. A total of 650 cases and 1542 controls have
been enrolled in 12 centres in seven European countries. Information on
exposure to occupational carcinogens, urban air pollution, background
radiation and dietary habits, as well as lifelong exposure to ETS, has
been collected by personal interview of cases and controls.
Self-reported (non-)smoking status was confirmed by interviews of
relatives. The relative risk (RR) of lung cancer risk was 1.16 (95% CI
0.93-1.44) for exposure to ETS from the spouse, 1.17 (95% CI 0.94-1.45)
for workplace ETS exposure and 1.14 (0.88-1.47) for combined spousal
and workplace exposure. Several quantitative indicators of ETS showed a
dose-response relationship with lung cancer risk; RRs were higher for
squamous cell carcinoma than for adenocarcinoma. There was no
association between lung cancer risk and ETS exposure during childhood.
Additional analyses are continuing on risk factors other than ETS."Extract
from `Behind the smokescreen' by Victoria Macdonald and Robert
Matthews, which appeared in The Sunday Telegraph, 15th March 1998."In
its [WHO's] report, the study team states its findings in the recherche
language of statistical analysis. Those exposed to environmental
tobacco smoke from their spouse, it claimed, have a `relative risk'
(RR) of lung cancer of 1.16, with a so-called 95 per cent confidence
interval (more of this later) ranging from 0.93 to 1.44.On the
face of it, the conclusion is clear: the study had found a 16 per cent
greater risk of cancer among those living with a smoking spouse.That,
at least, was the message that the WHO and its supporters wanted
emphasised. But as ever with statistics, the devil is in the details ...The
WHO study was based on results obtained by recruiting hundreds of
people and taking into account all the obvious sources of lung cancer
to which they were exposed, such as urban pollution.Then, by
sifting out the effect of all these other potential causes, the
research team was able to give an estimate of the risk of lung cancer
due to inhaling someone else's smoke.Yet no matter how careful
the researchers are to rule out other explanations from such
statistical studies, one simple one remains: fluke.Statisticians
have developed ways of stating their confidence that they haven't been
fooled by fluke, and the WHO team chose one known as the confidence
interval method. This gives the range of results which the study might
reasonably have got if nothing more than chance were at work.And
the bad news for those hailing the WHO results as proof-positive of a
cancer link with passive smoking is that the study's own confidence
interval of 0.93 to 1.44 includes a relative risk of 1 - that is, no
extra risk.In other words, the results are - as The Sunday
Telegraph stated - consistent with there being no real cancer risk for
non-smokers, and even with there being a reduced risk.The WHO
last week accused The Sunday Telegraph of concentrating on the study's
confidence intervals while ignoring the study's 'headline' relative
risk figure of 1.16. But what the WHO declined to point out was that
this headline figure alone is meaningless - as, unlike a confidence
interval, it does not show how likely fluke is to give such a result.The
chances of getting this headline figure by fluke alone can be
calculated. And once again, the bad news for the WHO and its followers
is that those chances are so high that the headline figure is not even
close to being statistically significant."Owing to media
interest in the WHO study the government appointed Scientific Committee
on Tobacco and Health (SCOTH) rushed out a report on ETS on 11th March,
No Smoking Day.Unlike the WHO study, this report contains no
new or original research, and merely continues the anti-smokers'
practice of reviewing reviews of studies on ETS. The report does not
consider the WHO study referred to above, and is issued prior to five
further WHO studies on ETS due to report during 1998 or later.While
the SCOTH report was hailed as being a report on the effects of ETS on
non-smokers, the bulk of the report actually concentrates on primary
smoking and factors that affect smokers and not non-smokers.In
keeping with earlier studies it reminds readers that middle age is
defined as being anyone between the age of 35 - 69 years old. Given
that average life expectancy in the UK is 74 years for men and 79 years
for women, the definition of middle age leaves little time for old age.Also
ignored by SCOTH is the fact that nearly 40% of the 120,000 deaths in
the UK allegedly due to smoking occur in men and women above the
average age of life expectancy (Hansard, 24th July 1997).In the
section on ETS, at point 2.7, reference is made to a November 1997
report by the Australian National Health & Medical Research Council
(NHMRC). This seems odd because at the beginning of 1997 an Australian
court prevented the publishing of its report because the NHMRC had
failed in discharging its statutory duty of public consultation. In
April 1997 a member of the working party on the report, Simon Chapman,
revealed to the Australian Press Association that the calculations of
risk to non-smokers who were exposed to ETS were so low that
journalists "will be hard pressed to write anything other than
`Official: passive smoking cleared-no lung cancer'." (For further
details see Free Choice, May/June 1997).At paragraph 2.20 SCOTH
puts the risk of lung cancer in non-exposed non-smokers at 10 people
per 100,000. It then goes on to note that an increased risk of 20-30%
of cancer in non-smokers exposed to ETS would mean 12-13 people per
100,000. However, as pointed out above, no account was taken of the WHO
study, and it is likely that if the method of the confidence interval
were used to take fluke into account, it would still include a zero
risk.Of greatest concern must be the claims in relation to cot
deaths. The only material considered were two reviews, one from the UK
in 1994 and one from the US 1995, and a report by Professor Peter J
Fleming published in the British Medical Journal in July 1996.No
account was taken of original research conducted by Jim Sprott and
Barry Richardson during the 1980's, or a series of other studies which
failed to establish a causal link between cot death and exposure to ETS
(for full details see Free Choice, September/October 1996).Of
the 37 recommendations, 46% were statements as to why the Government or
the public should believe everything SCOTH says, including three
recommendations on what the Government should force tobacco companies
to do. 38% of the recommendations could be described as job related.Insofar
as they called for further research, training or monitoring which, of
course, require people to do the job, and money to pay them. A further
11% of recommendations carried the implication that not only should the
Government or public believe them but that jobs should be created to
enable these beliefs to be put into action. The remaining
recommendations were policy proposals concerning bans on smoking and
advertising, and increases in tobacco taxation.The greatest
surprise was recommendation number 30 which acknowledged that there
were some beneficial effects of active smoking and called for more
research.The report, however, does not appear to be as welcomed
by the Government as one might expect. In a report by the Press
Association on 11th March the following appeared:"But the
Department of Health will stress that today's report is no more or less
than the opinions of the scientists and not a blueprint for the White
Paper." (my Emphasis --- Ed)Given that the majority of those
named in the report are scientist with names well known in the
anti-smoking movement, while none of those who have been critical of
the original research on ETS or found no correlation between ETS and
ill health in non-smokers sat on the Committee, it is hardly surprising
that inconvenient research was not considered, the report was written
and issued before the WHO research has been published in full, or that
their opinion should be what it is.