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AMH Campus to go Smoke Free
Athol
Memorial Hospital’s main campus, which includes the grounds and
parking lots at 2033 Main Street and the Medical Arts Building at 80
Mechanic Street, will officially be smoke free on Tuesday, September 4,
2007. The Hospital is committed to providing a safe, healthy
environment for our patients, visitors, and staff and serving as a
model of health promotion in the community. AMH will be banning
the use of all tobacco products on its campus and is requesting the
assistance of all patients, families, and visitors in observing this
ban.
Smoking is the leading cause of preventable illness and
death in the United States, and the major cause of hospital admissions
and readmissions. More than 440,000 people die in the U.S each
year from smoking-related diseases, and smoking is the leading cause of
heart disease, cancer, stroke, and emphysema. Patients who smoke
have twice the risk of wound infection than do non-smokers; are slower
to heal after surgery; and have increased gastrointestinal, prenatal,
and orthopedic complications.
Secondhand smoke, also known as passive smoking, or
environmental tobacco smoke, also has negative health
consequences. Lung cancer, nasal sinus cavity cancer, cervical
cancer, breast cancer, and bladder cancer have all been linked to
secondhand smoke. Other serious illnesses, such as heart disease,
narrowing and hardening of the arteries, asthma and chronic respiratory
conditions may be caused, and are worsened, by secondhand smoke.
Smoking anywhere in the Athol Memorial Hospital main campus buildings
has been prohibited since the early 1990’s. Patients who
smoke are offered nicotine replacement therapy upon admission and
assisted with smoking cessation plans when discharged.
The hospital sponsors a Smoking Cessation Support Group,
held every Monday at 6 p.m. in the cafeteria, open to anyone in the
community. T.J. Sweeney, Tobacco Treatment Specialist,
facilitates the meetings. The hospital is offering smoking
cessation classes, also taught by Sweeney, to staff members wanting to
quit.
“We are joining the ranks of many institutions, such as all
public schools, other hospitals, and many private companies, including
the L.S Starrett Company, right here in Athol, limiting smoking at
places of business,” stated Athol Memorial Hospital’s
President and CEO, Steve Penka, FACHE. “As the area’s
leading healthcare provider, it’s the right thing to
do.”
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