(SEH-kend hand smoke) Describes the smoke in the air when someone else smokes. Also called environmental tobacco smoke.
Also referred to as sidestream smoke, the smoke from the burning end of a cigarette, which contains higher concentrations of ammonia, carbon monoxide, nicotine, and tar than does the smoke inhaled by the smoker.
Exhaled smoke and sidestream smoke, also known as environmental tobacco smoke.
see environmental tobacco smoke.
Also known as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). The smoke inhaled by an individual not actively engaged in smoking. It contains the same harmful chemicals that smokers inhale.
See Appendix F: "Secondhand Smoke" for more information.
Also known as environmental tobacco smoke, it is what comes from a burning cigarette, pipe, or cigar, plus what the smoker exhales.
Also referred to as "sidestream smoke" or "environmental tobacco smoke," secondhand smoke poses a significant risk to those who are exposed to it. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 3,000 lung cancer deaths are caused by "passive smoking" yearly. Infants and children are especially susceptible to secondhand smoke.
a mixture of the smoke exhaled by smokers and the smoke that comes off the burning end of a cigarette, cigar, pipe, or bidi (also referred to as environmental tobacco smoke or ETS).
Smoke from someone blowing out while smoking, or smoke from a lit cigarette.
When a person inhales the smoke exhaled by a smoker. Secondhand smoke, like smoking, is dangerous for a developing fetus.
A combination of mainstream and sidestream smoke. Also called environmental tobacco smoke (ETS).
smoke that a person breathes out as well as smoke that comes from a burning cigarette, cigar, or pipe.