As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger considers a bill that would ban smoking at California state parks and beaches, the Los Angeles Times reports that not much is known about the effect of secondhand smoke outdoors.
From the Times:
No one has studied the effect of outdoor no-smoking policies. However, the California EPA report includes outdoor measurements of secondhand smoke, and in some settings, such as designated smoking areas or out in front of a bar, the levels were comparable to indoor data.
The effects indoors are widely accepted: regular exposure can increase the risk of heart disease, heart attack, respiratory infection, sudden infant death syndrome and lung cancer. It causes about 3,400 deaths from lung cancer every year in the U.S.
Here’s the full story.

