A Lincoln County coalition has long encouraged residents to protect children from secondhand smoke, and a new study by the University of Cincinnati provides powerful supporting evidence.

According to U.C. News, the year-long study followed children ages 0-17 who lived in situations where they were exposed to secondhand smoke, as well as children who were not exposed. Not only did smoke-exposed children have more emergency room visits, but they were more likely to then be hospitalized and require procedures such as nasal aspiration, steroid and albuterol treatments to open air passages, and so forth. 

This content has been Archived

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Etiam sed sodales massa, nec pellentesque dui. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Praesent erat tortor, lacinia sit amet viverra et, pulvinar a nulla.

Praesent tristique imperdiet diam sed cursus. Etiam at lobortis tellus. In imperdiet quam eget augue placerat, quis tristique velit lacinia. Nam aliquet tellus eget odio egestas rutrum. Donec elementum lacus eu velit eleifend viverra.

Mauris tincidunt orci sed tristique ultricies. In id sapien vel nulla aliquam congue at vitae elit. Nunc et laoreet justo, quis sagittis neque.

Etiam molestie tortor at ultricies rutrum. Aenean suscipit tempus convallis. Sed ac vestibulum eros. Pellentesque bibendum dui eget velit imperdiet, sit amet rutrum eros viverra.

Duis tincidunt, massa quis fermentum rhoncus, leo dui consequat sem, et lobortis magna dui a justo. Pellentesque lorem dui, consectetur id urna sed, tempor varius purus. Proin eu efficitur felis.

© 2024 The North Platte Bulletin. All rights reserved.