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Banned: USF Health says 'no' to smoking

By Alessandra Giannini, CORRESPONDENT

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Published: Thursday, November 19, 2009

Updated: Thursday, November 19, 2009

Smoking

ORACLE PHOTO/MIKE WILSON

USF Health is working to be smoke-free, and it wants others to join in, too.

Students and faculty from the College of Medicine want to create a smoke-free USF and promote healthy living for students and employees, said Steven Specter, associate dean for Student Affairs in the College of Medicine and leader of the group to implement a ban.

A ceremony today at 10 a.m. in the USF Health Rotunda marks a new ban on cigarette smoking at USF Health and celebrates National Great American Smoke-Out Day, an annual event in which people are encouraged to quit smoking.

The ban prohibits smoking inside and outside or within a 100-foot radius of all 19 USF Health buildings, Specter said.

While USF Health hopes the ban will be effective, it is not upheld by the law.

Under the Florida Clean Indoor Air Act  (FCIAA), smoking in all enclosed indoor workplaces is prohibited. However, it does not include the surrounding area outside a building.

“At this point in time, because the law does not strongly enforce non-smoking, we are not looking to do this in an impunitive way but rather to encourage good health practices throughout the USF Health campus,” Specter said.

Creating a true smoke-free environment both indoors and outdoors is not consistent with the FCIAA, he said.

The USF Health campus includes: Colleges of Medicine, Nursing, and Public Health; Schools of Biomedical Sciences, Continuing Education, and Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Sciences; Children’s Medical Services building; Shriners Hospitals for Children; USF Health Clinics; the Carol & Frank Morsani Center for Advanced Health Care; and the Johnnie B. Byrd Sr. Alzheimer’s Center & Research Institute.

USF Health would like to lobby to change the FCIAA law, and prohibit smoking inside and outside of buildings, Specter said. The change would allow USF to work toward a completely smoke-free environment.

“There is a strong association of cigarette smoking and a number of health problems, and so the desire to create an environment that would be welcoming to our students and promoting health to the patients that come here was a very important aspect of USF Health,” Specter said.

The response to the ban on smoking has been positive, he said.

The ban is “a step in the right direction,” said Amanda Rohwedder, a graduate student in the College of Medicine.

“Creating a smoke-free campus shows USF’s commitment to promoting a healthy lifestyle for its students and employees,” Rohwedder said.

In an effort to help smokers quit, the USF Health Area Education Center has implemented programs that provide smoking cessation resources, said Donna Peterson, dean of the College of Public Health.

The center offers nicotine patches at a reduced cost, support groups and classes that teach techniques to quit smoking, Peterson said.

The H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute has been a smoke-free area for more than a year, she said.

Violators of the ban are given a card that states USF Health is a smoke-free environment and provides information on the smoking cessation resources available to them, Specter said.

Signs indicating the smoke-free policy are placed at various locations across the USF Health premises.

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11 comments

Jeff
Thu Nov 26 2009 12:36
Smoke free and ALCOHOL FREE ...I'm for that !!!!!!!
John Doe
Wed Nov 25 2009 18:53
View this topic from a smoker's point of view...

First you said we needed to go outside. Fine we do.
You raise our taxes. Fine we pay it.
Then you say you don't like where we are smoking outside. So you attempt to illegally ban where we smoke.

Where does this stop? We do live in a free country, last I checked. Smoking is legal because ~20%-30% of the population smokes. No politician wants to go up against all those people.

Also - we met you half way by banning smoking inside. Why is it fair for us to settle again? Maybe you guys just need to realize that this is a legal activity that a large chunk of the population enjoys.

It is important to know where all this puritanic behavior leads. Ever read about prohibition?

Jenna
Tue Nov 24 2009 17:08
John Doe,

It is so obvious that the only point of your comment was to bash up others' comments. People like you are not agreeable to anyone. Ageed smoking is a legal activity, but that does not mean all legal activities are good for the humankind. And dont get me started on what kind of political collusion go into keep letting smoking be a legal activity and the tobacco industry in business.

And about the library issue, although the smokers are technically standing outside the library doors, it totally makes a joke out of the indoor-smoking-prohibition rule when smoker's stand mere feet away from the entrance and their thick smoke getting blown in each time the door opens for someone.

Dave-kun
Tue Nov 24 2009 15:53
@John Doe: You ask where the smokers in front of the library should go to smoke? There is an overhang on both sides of the library with plenty of benches to sit at. You can smoke all you want over there without inconveniencing all of the non-smokers that are forced to use that door. You know, because it's the only door into and out of the library. Smoke all you want, but at least learn the common courtesy to step out of a heavily trafficked area before doing so. I don't smoke, so why should I be forced to walk through your cloud of cigarette smoke and arrive at work smelling like a trashy casino?
John Doe
Tue Nov 24 2009 02:44
@Ryan - I'd like to see that. I'll tell you to walk away. If you don't, I'll make sure to blow the smoke your way.

@Your Name - Why isn't the University doing anything to protect us from idiotic students like yourself.

You people need to face facts. Smoking isn't illegal. It is a perfectly legal activity and I am well within my rights to engage in such behavior. I question the constitutionality of such measures at a public university. After all, smokers pay more taxes than non-smokers.

If you don't like being around people who smoke, walk another way. So you might need to walk a little longer, but you live a healthy lifestyle!

@Dave-Kun - Where do you propose the smokers who use the library go to smoke? Do we not have as much of a right to use the library as you do? Are we not allowed to engage to a perfectly legal activity outside for a brief moment? Maybe they need to stop all the loitering outside of that building.

Your name
Mon Nov 23 2009 14:02
the smoke problem at the library entrance is getting bigger with each passing day. why isnt the university doing anything to protect us from those obnoxious and deadly cigarette smoke clouds???
Dave-kun
Sun Nov 22 2009 16:03
Seconded, Ryan. I have no problem with people smoking, but I do have a problem with the cloud I have to walk through in front of the Library every day. Maybe smokers on campus would be treated with a bit more respect if they were a little more considerate about how their habits affect those around them.

Oh, and the "no smoking" sign in the Library entryway is doing a load of good. We'll see if Health actually enforces their new rule.

Ryan
Fri Nov 20 2009 19:15
Christina,

Really poor comparison. If you haven't figured it out the problem with smoking isn't just the harm it does to the smoker, but more importantly, the people around the smoker. I don't think there is such a thing as 2nd hand soda.

As for being treated better, I agree. People need to be supportive of those that wish to quit. However, if I see someone smoking where they shouldn't be I tell them to put it out.

Oliver North
Fri Nov 20 2009 13:35
Christina is right, what personal choices do we Americans have left? Things sure have 'changed'
Christina
Thu Nov 19 2009 19:03
I don't smoke and it's not something I support but I'm tired of seeing smokers treated like second class citizens. Smoking is a nasty habit that can lead to a lifetime of health problems but it's not up to the university to say if people can smoke outside. The school may as well ban soft drinks and junk food which can also have a negative long term affects on our bodies.
Your name
Thu Nov 19 2009 12:51
Why NOT make the ENTIRE campus smoke-free? It's about time we do that.






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