Casino dealers here are exposed to a host of harmful chemicals through secondhand smoke while on the job, according to a new National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health study.
The study, the first to examine the effects of secondhand smoke in Las Vegas casinos, reported that the dealers had traces of a tobacco-specific carcinogen in their urine.
The results were drawn from 124 casino dealers at Bally's, Caesars Palace and Paris Las Vegas who wore portable pumps that measured the level of tobacco smoke in the air during their shifts. In addition, 114 dealers submitted urine samples to the agency before and after their shifts.
The report found that a majority of the 147 dealers who completed a separate health survey reported symptoms such as red or irritated eyes, a cough, stuffy nose, runny nose and headache.
In total, 11 percent of the dealers studied, who did not work in poker rooms at the time, had been diagnosed with asthma, while 35 percent had symptoms suggestive of work-related asthma. Many poker rooms have voluntarily banned smoking.
The institute conducted research and interviewed workers during three on-site visits from July 2005 through January 2006.
Anti-smoking advocates hailed the results of the long-awaited study, which mirror previous government and privately funded research on secondhand smoke and are expected to provide ammunition to those pressuring the gaming industry to implement smoking bans.
"Casino workers deserve the same rights as other workers, including the right to a healthy and safe workplace, free from toxic secondhand smoke," said Cynthia Hallett, executive director of Americans For Nonsmokers' Rights. "After the release of this report, we hope to see casino workers protected by strong smoke-free workplace laws throughout the country."
But insiders said that won't be easy, even if many casino executives privately support the idea. The industry has long fought smoking bans, fearing they would cut into profits as smokers go elsewhere to light up or interrupt their games to smoke outdoors.
With the recession pushing some casino companies to the verge of bankruptcy, some insiders say the industry would put up an even bigger fight during such a critical time.
"If we (ban smoking) and competitors don't follow suit, what then?" said one executive, who asked not to be named.
"That strikes me as enormous," considering that only about 7 percent of the national population suffers from asthmatic symptoms, said James Repace, a biophysicist and former Environmental Protection Agency scientist who has testified in smoking lawsuits against businesses, including casinos. "This is an important result that broadens the information we have on secondhand smoke."
While the sample size was relatively small, it's significant for a study of this kind, said Repace, who has conducted similar studies that have been published in academic journals.
The study adds a significant chapter to a small body of research on secondhand smoke in casinos.
Although some scientists and other researchers who support smoking bans have conducted such research, the institute -- which conducts research and offers recommendations, but doesn't enforce workplace safety -- has completed a handful of studies on secondhand smoke, but only one other casino study, of Bally's workers in Atlantic City, N.J., focusing on secondhand smoke.
Institute officials said the study's results were in line with previous research conducted by various groups on secondhand smoke. Officials blamed the more than three-year lag time in completing the study on staffing, turnover and a backlog of other research reports.
"This took longer than we would have liked," said Christine West, a nurse epidemiologist for the institute and study co-author, adding that casino management fully cooperated with researchers during the information-gathering process.
Few government studies exist in part because institute evaluations are driven by employee complaints and workers fear they will be fired for requesting a study of their workplaces, said Stephanie Steinberg, chairwoman of Smoke-Free Gaming, a Colorado-based group that lobbies for smoking bans in several states, including Nevada.
"This rigorous evaluation shows this isn't just the perception of the employee. It's a reality that they were exposed to carcinogens at work," she said.
Terrie Price, who dealt cards at Caesars Palace for 26 years, requested the agency study the air at Caesars and the other casinos, where colleagues worked. She called the study a vindication of two decades' worth of complaints. "We've been waiting a long time for this," she said.
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
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Secondhand smoke is a toxic
Secondhand smoke is a toxic cocktail consisting of poisons and carcinogens. There are over 4000 chemical compounds in secondhand smoke; 200 of which are known to be poisonous, and upwards of 60 have been identified as carcinogens.
When a cigarette is smoked, about half of the smoke is inhaled / exhaled (mainstream smoke) by the smoker and the other half floats around in the air (sidestream smoke). The combination of mainstream and sidestream smoke makes up environmental tobacco smoke (ETS).
Well, dealers work inside casinos wherein most players are smokers. I suggest that casino managements has to do something to protect their employees from second hand smoke.
Secondhand smoke is a toxic
Secondhand smoke is a toxic cocktail consisting of poisons and carcinogens. There are over 4000 chemical compounds in secondhand smoke; 200 of which are known to be poisonous, and upwards of 60 have been identified as carcinogens.
When a cigarette is smoked, about half of the smoke is inhaled / exhaled (mainstream smoke) by the smoker and the other half floats around in the air (sidestream smoke). The combination of mainstream and sidestream smoke makes up environmental tobacco smoke (ETS).
Well, dealers work inside casinos wherein most players are smokers. I suggest that casino managements has to do something to protect their employees from second hand smoke.
Secondhand smoke is a toxic
Secondhand smoke is a toxic cocktail consisting of poisons and carcinogens. There are over 4000 chemical compounds in secondhand smoke; 200 of which are known to be poisonous, and upwards of 60 have been identified as carcinogens.
When a cigarette is smoked, about half of the smoke is inhaled / exhaled (mainstream smoke) by the smoker and the other half floats around in the air (sidestream smoke). The combination of mainstream and sidestream smoke makes up environmental tobacco smoke (ETS).
Well, dealers work inside casinos wherein most players are smokers. I suggest that casino managements has to do something to protect their employees from second hand smoke.
Sorry for the triple
Sorry for the triple posts...NOT my fault. I submitted the first then page hung then clicked on refresh then page loaded error then clicked on refresh then saw that there are 3 posts already....kindly delete the 2... Thanks.
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