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HALIFAX, Nova Scotia – Nova Scotia’s newly enacted ban on smoking in vehicles carrying children not only will protect them from harmful secondhand smoke, it also will create a “wave of change” across the country, the Canadian Cancer Society said.
The province became the first in Canada to pass such a ban Thursday, winning applause from the cancer society.
“People are watching Nova Scotia quite closely,” said Meg McCallum of the group’s Nova Scotia division. “They’re seeing Nova Scotia as a leader in tobacco control, and I believe the passing of this legislation is really going to create a wave of change across the country.”
The Nova Scotia law makes it illegal to smoke in a vehicle with anyone under age 19 inside.
McCallum said secondhand smoke is far more toxic in the enclosed space of a vehicle, and children are more susceptible to its harmful effects, such as chronic ear infections, asthma and other respiratory conditions.
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