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Tobacco-Free Parks: Promoting Health and Protecting Communities

Learn about the Omaha Tobacco-Free Parks Initiative and the importance of creating tobacco-free environments in parks. Discover the benefits for community health, preventing chronic diseases, reducing litter, and changing community norms. Support MOTAC's efforts for a tobacco-free metro area.

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Tobacco-Free Parks: Promoting Health and Protecting Communities

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  1. Agenda • Rationale for tobacco free parks • Omaha Tobacco-Free Parks Initiative Overview • Looking Forward • Q & A

  2. Tobacco-Free Parks Tobacco-free parks are a growing trend across the country. As more Americans are afflicted by chronic disease than ever before, many of the best treatments for chronic disease comes from changing lifestyles.

  3. National Health Statistics • Seven out of 10 deaths among Americans each year result from chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, and stroke. Many of these are a result from tobacco or exposure to secondhand smoke. • Nearly half of American adults suffer from at least one chronic illness.

  4. Top 10 Reasons for Tobacco-Free Parks • Parks are established to promote healthy activities. • Secondhand smoke harms everyone, and it is still harmful in outdoor settings. • Cigarette litter is dangerous (for human and animal health). • Cigarette litter could cause fires and damage public and private property. • Tobacco-free policies help change community norms. • Most residents of Douglas County (86%) support tobacco-free park and recreation policies. In addition, 96% of those surveyed believe that smoking should be restricted at outdoor sporting events. • Policies provide consistency among community athletic facilities and groups. • Policies reduce litter and maintenance costs. • Tobacco-free environments promote positive community role modeling and protect the health, safety, and welfare of community members. • Tobacco-free policies help break the connection between tobacco and sports.

  5. Omaha Tobacco-Free Parks Initiative Overview

  6. Parks Should Promote Healthy Activities Tobacco-free policies fit with this idea

  7. Cigarette & Tobacco Litter Discarded cigarettes: • Pollute the land and water • Can be ingested by toddlers, pets and wildlife • Can diminish the aesthetics of public parks and natural habitats • Result in additional maintenance expense

  8. Secondhand Smoke is Dangerous • Secondhand smoke is a human carcinogen. There is no safe level of SHS exposure and it has immediate health consequences. • According to Repace Association, secondhand smoke levels in outdoor public places can reach levels as high as those found in indoor facilities where smoking is permitted.

  9. MOTAC is Working to Help Change Community Norms

  10. Initiative Kick-Off

  11. Education & Awareness

  12. Community Support

  13. Widespread Public Support • In Minneapolis, about 65% of residents supported tobacco-free parks. • In NYC, 69% of New Yorkers supported smoke-free parks after the policy was enacted. • Americans for Non-Smokers’ Rights (ANRF) lists well over 500 fully comprehensive policies in the United States. • 2,014 entities restrict smoking outdoors, with 1,368 in places such as parks and beaches.

  14. Widespread Local Public Support In outdoor parks, do you think smoking should be allowed in Douglas County? Source: Nebraska Adult Tobacco Survey, 2011

  15. Widespread Local Public Support At outdoor sporting events, do you think smoking should be allowed in Douglas County? Source: Nebraska Adult Tobacco Survey, 2011

  16. Capstone Project: Smoke-Free Parks • Of 238 surveyed, 75% would favor a smoke-free parks policy. • Over 80% of those in favor believe that this would reduce exposure to secondhand smoke. A study was conducted in Spring 2012 by UNMC College of Public Health graduate student to explore public knowledge and attitudes about a smoke-free parks policy in Douglas County.

  17. I Support Tobacco-Free Parks

  18. Looking Forward • …increase support for all area parks to be designated smoke-free • …continue to advocate for a tobacco-free parks policy across the metro area

  19. Will You Support MOTAC? • …by making your outdoor area smoke-free? • …by advocating for a tobacco-free parks policy across the metro area?

  20. Questions? Metro Omaha Tobacco Action Coalition (MOTAC) 3801 Harney Street, Omaha, NE 68131 402-546-1099 info@motac.org facebook.com/OmahaTobaccoFreeParks

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