[Headlines Only] [Top Stories Only]
Categories
· Health/Science
· Federal
· Secret Documents
· Secondhand Smoke
Organizations
· Dhhs

Tobacco Industry Opposition to Designating Environmental Tobacco Smoke Through E-codes 

2005, Volume 26, Number 1, Pages 75-89 / April 2005, Volume 26, Number 1
Jump to full article: Journal of Public Health Policy, 2005-04-01

Intro:

This manuscript examines the public policy importance of 1993, United States Department of Health and Human Services actions to require doctors and hospitals to report a new external cause of injury code or E-code for environmental tobacco smoke related to causes of death such as lung cancer and severe heart disease. . . . The E-code has continued to the present because of scientific and administrative recognition that environmental tobacco smoke is conclusively linked to illness and death. The industry argued that the E-code was unnecessary because of costs to business and no conclusive scientific evidence linking environmental tobacco smoke with pulmonary and cardiovascular deaths. This regulatory action based on current scientific evidence and medical decision-making contradicts the industry's claim that no deaths are conclusively associated with environmental tobacco smoke.

Jump to full article »