CLEARFIELD — If Spot could speak, he might tell his owners — if
they smoked — that all that secondhand smoke is “ruff” on the both of
them.
A Davis County Health Department educator and a nationally
recognized Davis County veterinarian, after reviewing information from
recent veterinary studies, contend secondhand smoke has serious effects
on pets in the household.
They hope that educating pet owners who
smoke about the dangers of secondhand smoke and the risk it poses to
their pets will encourage them to quit smoking.
Studies show
nearly 30 percent of pet owners who smoke would try to quit if they
learned secondhand smoke could harm their pets, while fewer than 2
percent would quit smoking for the sake of their children, according to
Gloria Yugel, a community health educator with the Davis County Health
Department.
“Secondhand smoke is just as damaging to your pet’s
health as it is to a human’s health,” Yugel said. “Exposure to
secondhand smoke has been associated with allergies in dogs, eye and
skin diseases in birds, lymph gland and oral cancers in cats, nasal and
lung cancer in dogs, and respiratory problems in both cats and dogs.”
Other
pets such as rabbits, guinea pigs, or any bird species also are
vulnerable to the dangers of secondhand smoke inhalation, Yugel said.
A
recent study by U.S. veterinarians concluded that cats whose owners
smoked were prone to feline lymphoma, a form of cancer that kills three
out of four cats within a year of diagnosis, Yugel said.
Researchers
found that such cats were twice as likely to develop the disease when
compared to cats with nonsmoking owners, she said.
It also was
revealed that if two people living in the house smoke, the risk for the
cat to get cancer is four times greater, Yugel said.
Dogs are similarly endangered by secondhand smoke.
“Researchers
have established that the development of canine asthma, as well as
nasal and lung cancer, may be prompted by exposure to secondhand smoke,”
Yugel said.
“People need to be aware that domesticated pets used
to live in the wild, and they relied on their heightened sense of smell
to survive. Because of this, their nasal membranes are much more
sensitive than humans’ membranes,” said Clayne R. White, a veterinarian
at Bayview Animal Hospital in Farmington.
“Asthma in cats is
already a common ailment. We have found that if a cat lives in a home
where someone smokes, the cat’s chances of developing asthma are 10
times greater than in a nonsmoking household,” said White, who gained
national notoriety in 2010 when he took two white Bengal tiger cubs into
his Kaysville home after they had been abandoned by their mother in
captivity at the Lagoon zoo.
“Also, dogs are at risk. So, if
someone in your household smokes,” White said, “watch out for your dog
coughing, wheezing or having difficulties breathing.”
Secondhand
smoke is particularly dangerous for puppies when they have weaker immune
systems, making them more susceptible to infection, White said.
For those interested in free, effective smoking cessation resources, call the Utah Tobacco Quit Line at 1-800-Quit.Now or visit www.utahquitnet.com.
http://www.standard.net/stories/2011/12/20/secondhand-smoke-harming-pets