Prince William Hospital bans smoking on grounds
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By Bennie Scarton Jr.
Published: May 14, 2008
The Prince William Health System will greatly expand its tobacco-free environment.
Effective May 31, a new policy will ban tobacco use from not only inside Prince William Hospital but throughout the hospital grounds, including vehicles in the parking lots.
The new tobacco-free policy applies to employees, visitors, patients, contractors, students, volunteers, physicians and anyone else at the hospital and also to other properties affiliated with the health system, such as the Gainesville Medical Center; Caton Merchant House, an assisted living facility; and the Haymarket Health Center, which will open June 2 and offer comprehensive diagnostic imaging and rehabilitation services, a laboratory and emergency room.
‘The Health System is an advocate for good health and the research is clear on the adverse effects of tobacco products,” said Cynda Tipple, chief operating officer of the hospital. “They are a major cause of preventable disease and death, and secondhand smoke — even outdoors — is a significant cause of disease as well.”
The Health System follows a nationwide trend of healthcare facilities kicking the nicotine habit. Fauquier Hospital announced that its facilities will be tobacco-free in July 2008 and Inova Health System did likewise last fall.
May 31 was chosen because it is recognized every year as World No Tobacco Day.
That means after that date no one can light up anywhere on the hospital’s 52-acre campus — not even going to their car to grab a quick puff.
According to Karyn O’Brien, director of the Intensive Outpatient Program at the hospital, the health benefits of quitting tobacco usage are many:
• 20 minutes after quitting: heart rate and blood pressure drops;
• 12 hours after quitting, carbon monoxide level in the blood drops to normal;
• Two weeks to three months after quitting, circulation improves and long function increases;
• One to nine months after quitting, coughing and shortness of breath decrease; and cilia (tiny hair-like structures that move mucus out of the lungs) regain normal function in the lungs.
To assist people who would like to quit smoking, the hospital is offering smoking cessation classes. The six-week educational class is conducted once a week on Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Birthing Center conference room. The program fee is $210 and registration is required with the fee to be paid in advance. To get more information on the class, call 703-369-8403.
The hospital has been tobacco-free inside for more than 25 years.
Staff writer Bennie Scarton Jr. can be reached at 703-369-6707.
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Reader Reactions
Posted by ( ljp93 ) on May 21, 2008 at 1:36 am
Kudo’s to PWH for taking a stand, why should one have to walk through a “designated smoking area” to get to the hospital or have to deal with an employee who reeks of smoke, as one having an allergy to cigarette smoke this is a major breakthrough...thank you
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Posted by ( Interested Party ) on May 15, 2008 at 2:58 pm
Come on. Prince William is a hospital. Why should it be okay to smoke in a place that’s trying to take care of patients suffering from heart disease, lung disease and cancer? Haven’t you heard of sidestream smoke? If they allow smoking on their grounds, then they are hypocrits. And, if you truly believe that stop smoking classes are cash cows for hospital, think again. Oh, and while I agree you are responsible for starting smoking in the first place, why should the hospital be responsible for providing you with discounted remedies? At $3.50 a pack a day, buy your own patches.
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Posted by ( PaperReader ) on May 15, 2008 at 10:32 am
It is quite silly to have people smoking right outside the entrance ways of hospitals, I fully agree. But as a smoker myself, i think it is also silly that smokers can’t even smoke in their car while visiting people at the hospital. I am all for banning smoking in public place because yes, it does affect the health of others that don’t smoke. But there is nothing wrong with giving smokers options on where they can smoke away from the facility. Non-smokers won’t see my next comment as acceptable, but what happened to equal rights for all? Banning smoking on the property won’t deter the smokers, for some they will just find another way around it. And as far as the classes, obviously they need to do some more research because those classes don’t work. How about offering a lower price on the Chantix...the stuff that actually does work to quit smoking. Or, if you believe the classes will work then offer them for free. Don’t take the smoking stations away and then charge a lot of money for a class and expect smokers to be happy about that. Yes, it is our choice to destroy our health...but for those that don’t know what it is like to try and quit, they have not a leg to stand on because they don’t know how hard it is. Look at it from both points of view.
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Posted by ( phdee ) on May 14, 2008 at 6:16 pm
An overkill. Trying to stir up training/class fees. If a person wants to destroy his/her health, let them. mORE FREEDOM IS DISAPPEARING.
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Posted by ( richie ) on May 14, 2008 at 2:33 pm
Good. To allow smoking on hospital grounds is akin to hospitals that put McDonald’s kiosks in the cafeteria. This is a good trend, now if they only banned smoking in restaurants....
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