Fumare in aereo


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Per mia grande sorpresa, poco fa mi sono imbattuto in questa tabella:

http://hem.passagen.se/fungus/airlines.html

È stata una sorpresa scoprire che è ancora possibile fumare a bordo degli aerei di alcune compagnie.
È tuttora attuale?

Ipotizzando di volare con Air Algerie da MXP, al banco check in posso richiedere un posto fumatori?
Per me è stata davvero una sorpresa, in quanto ero sicuro che il fumo fosse bandito da tutte le compagnie aeree.
 
Con l'inizio del nuovo millennio le compagnie aeree stavano adottando, chi più velocemente, chi meno, la normativa contro il fumo, diramata dalla IATA e alla quale aderiscono tutte le compagnie membre.
Credo sia ampiamente superata.
 
Credo che molti dei nomi di compagnie aeree defunte da decenni possano essere un indizio del grado di attualità di quella tabella :)
 
La tabella è aggiornata a Luglio 2003.
Sui voli AH è vietato fumare.
 
Ricordo un filmato recente in cui, su Saudia, una parte della famiglia reale fumava. Non so quale sia la policy, con i voli di tutti i giorni.

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Tema: fumare in aereo.

Svolgimento: magari.

Fine.

http://www.ed.ac.uk/news/2015/smokingban-140815

Smoking ban linked to drop in stillbirths
Stillbirths have dropped by almost eight per cent in England since the smoking ban was introduced, research shows.
The number of babies dying shortly after birth has also dropped by almost eight per cent, the study estimates.
The findings add to growing evidence that anti-smoking laws have had significant benefits for infant and child health.
Infant health
Researchers looked at information on more than ten million births in England between 1995 and 2011.
Their findings suggest that almost 1500 stillbirths and newborn deaths were averted in the first four years after the law to prohibit smoking in public places was introduced.
Birth weight
The team also assessed the impact of the smoking ban on the number of babies born with a low birth weight, which is linked to health complications in later life including heart disease and diabetes.
More than five thousand fewer babies were born with a low birth weight of less than two and a half kilograms the researchers estimate.
Long-term effects
Smoking and smoke-exposure during pregnancy are known to have long-term adverse effects on the health of unborn children, including increased risk of diabetes and heart disease.
The researchers have previously shown that rates of premature births have dropped significantly in countries where smoke-free legislation has been introduced.
The number of children being admitted to hospital for asthma attacks and severe respiratory infections has also fallen since the bans.
Currently, only around 18 per cent of the world’s population is protected by comprehensive smoke-free laws. Accelerated action to implement smoking bans in the many countries yet to do so is likely to save considerable numbers of young lives and bring a healthier future for our unborn children.
Dr Jasper Been
Honorary Research Fellow, Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh
Reduced risk
This is the first study to show that smoke-free legislation is helping to reduce the risk of babies dying before or shortly after birth.
This study is further evidence of the potential power of smoke-free legislation to protect present and future generations from the devastating health consequences of smoking and second hand exposure to tobacco smoke.
Professor Aziz Sheikh
Co-Director of Centre for Medical Informatics, University of Edinburgh
The study is published in the journal Scientific Reports. It was funded by the Thrasher Research Fund and the International Pediatric Research Foundation.
The research was conducted by scientists at the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow, Imperial College London, the Erasmus University Medical Centre and Maastricht University in the Netherlands, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in the US.