When I first came to University of Denver, I was amazed by the amount of smokers on campus. My high school was a smoke-free campus so the smoky haze outside of every building was a bit new to me. Now, I have grown uncomfortably accustomed to the smog. Still, I wonder, how is this secondhand smoke affecting non-smokers on campus?
Unless you never read the newspaper or watch TV or connect with any media output, you must be aware of the numerous health issues associated with smoking tobacco products. Most campus residents saw and read 2009’s first TP Times edition, so we recognize that smoking kills. If not, track down the political cartoon depicting multiple clouds of smoke in the shape of guns pointing at an innocent man sitting on a park bench. Or, better yet, look for one of the posters with a dog stating, “I eat poop, but my habit doesn’t cause cancer.”
Scientists have proven that cigarette ingredients cause cancer. Have you ever researched what a cigarette is made of? Let me give you a hint: cancer. Cigarettes contain over 4,000 chemicals; 43 of which are known to be carcinogens. Some of these cancer causing chemicals include nicotine, tar, carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, ammonia, hydrogen cyanide, and arsenic. So when you walk through a cloud of smoke remember you are inhaling tar (like the roads you drive on while on your way to Breckenridge). Then, is formaldehyde not the gross smelling chemical used to preserve dead bodies? You are correct! As you smoke or inhale secondhand smoke, are you preserving your living body? I think not.
According to the American Cancer Society, 440,000 people die in the US due to tobacco use. The American Cancer Society states, “Cigarettes kill more Americans than alcohol, car accidents, suicide, AIDS, homicide and illegal drugs combined.” Do we really want the University of Denver to be a campus which promotes death? While not all students will get cancer, there is still a higher chance of students getting smoking-related illnesses when we allow smoking on campus. Nonsmoker lungs do not request smoke-polluted air to breath, yet they are left without a choice. The Health and Counseling Center currently promotes a campaign to respect our bodies. Why do we not respect our bodies daily by eliminating the threat of cancer causing smoke?
Even if you ignore the threat of cancer, there are many possible short-term effects due to secondhand smoke. Brief exposure to cigarette smoke can exacerbate asthma, allergies and bronchitis while also possibly causing eye irritation, headaches and nausea. Imagine a tour walking across the sunny, green campus of DU when a student walks by exhaling smoke. Suddenly, one prospective student starts wheezing and gasping for air as he begins to have an asthma attack. While this may be extreme, do we really want campus visitors to associate DU with smoke? It is not too much to ask smokers to step off campus. In a CNN article, one smoker from Gainesville State College, a smoke-free college campus, stated, “Even as a smoker, I don't like to walk past a cloud of smoke.” Now, without any complaints, he walks to a parking lot off campus in order to smoke.
If other universities have passed legislation for a smoke-free campus, then the University of Denver should join this progressive initiative. DU’s Health and Counseling Center cited a statistic from the Department of Health and Human Services stating, “50,000 non-smokers die each year due to involuntary exposure to tobacco smoke in the U.S. alone.” The University of Denver does not want any current or future students included in those statistics one day. So why not support a campaign which just wants to help prevent health concerns of University of Denver students? Sign in support of a tobacco-free campus and promote a university initiative for health.