欢迎来到江沪英语网

大学考试|Smoking butted out of workplace

来源:www.huiguohuo.com 2025-01-30

Shanghai health authorities have extended smoking bans from public venues1 to all indoor workplaces as measures to clear the city's air of cigarette smoke by 2011 are ratcheted up.

Part of a three-year campaign to eradicate2 passive smoking and stage a salubrious World Expo in 2010, the latest initiative will rid all government buildings, offices, schools and hospitals of harmful passive smoke.

All places with ceilings and at least three walls will be defined as indoor areas where smoking will be strictly3 prohibited, Li Mingzhu, director of the tobacco control office under the municipal health bureau, had said previously4.

No designated-smoking areas will be allowed in the smoke-free zones, she said. This is to minimize the impact of second-hand5 smoking.

Signs heralding6 the bans will be in place at all restaurants, hotels and other entertainment venues by 2011.

So far, no-smoking areas have already been established in about 300 restaurants and hotels in the city, with a further 6,000 large and medium-sized such venues scheduled to have them in place by next year.

We encourage people to take action against smoking indoors and to promote a healthy lifestyle in the city, said an official surnamed Jiang, at the Shanghai Patriotic7 Health Campaign Commission Office.

Research by Fudan University shows about 70 percent of people obey no-smoking signs.

According to government statistics, China is home to some 350 million smokers8, 1 million of whom die of smoking-related diseases each year.

In Shanghai, one in four people enjoy a puff9.

This has prompted the city to set up about 60 outpatient clinics where those who wish to kick the dangerous habit can receive advice and treatment.

According to health experts, 10 percent of tobacco addicts10 who seek professional medical advice or treatment succeed in breaking the addiction11. An even lower percentage quits, relying on will power alone.

At first, patients come because of a respiratory disease without knowing that it was caused by smoking, said Pan Jue, a doctor at the Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital.

The doctor said the hospital has seen an increase in the number of smokers going to seek advice and treatment in recent months.

When we tell them the cause, and that they can only get better by giving up the habit, they are inclined to do so, Pan said.


相关文章推荐

01

30

大学考试|Powerful salt tide hits Pearl River

The most powerful salt tide since last autumn hit the Pearl River in Guangdong province yesterday, a senior local astron

01

30

大学考试|Shame of fake TCM research

Four papers on traditional Chinese medicine were retracted1 by international journals last year because of plagiarism2

12

20

大学考试|Dining out going out of fashion

Restaurants are usually the first to feel the chill of recession as Beijing's high-end eateries that depend on group res

12

20

大学考试|Shoe attack leads to sole-searching

The Afghan journalists kept their shoes on.A day after an Iraqi reporter hurled1 a pair of shoes at US President George

11

01

大学考试|Wen calls for restructuring of glob

Premier1 Wen Jiabao has called for new rules to guide the international financial system following Asian and European le

11

01

大学考试|Obama floods airwaves with TV appea

Democrat1 Barack Obama took to the airwaves with a half-hour paid television appeal in an effort to lock in his lead in

11

01

大学考试|Rare animals, plants boost ties

The Chinese mainland and Taiwan exchanged rare animals and plants yesterday in a sign of warmer cross-Straits ties.Top n

11

01

大学考试|FDA to open China offices

The US Food and Drug Administration will open three offices in China this week to help check the safety of exports heade

07

24

大学考试|Mudslide death toll now 128

Hopes of survival of the hundreds of people buried in Monday's landslide1 in Shanxi province is almost zero, the country

07

24

大学考试|Optimal conditions set for spacewal

Bringing forward the launch date of China's third manned spacecraft by one month will maximize conditions for the countr