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H-ABC, it s…not easy as 1-2-3 Pediatrics

Elouise and her parents sit hand-in-hand on a bench, smiling. Most of us felt some personal impact when the world shut down in the spring of 2020. We adjusted: working from home, remote schooling, small bubbles of family to limit exposure. For Michele Sloan, being unable to have childcare in the home to allow her adult social time – or just alone time – hit differently. “Before the pandemic, I was able to live my life pretty normally. We would have sitters come in if we wanted to go out or get things done. I’ve given up a lot of that. For one thing, I want to be with her. But mostly, I need to make sure that she’s safe,” Michele said.

Parents second-hand marijuana smoke may cause colds in children

THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images Children whose parents smoke or vape cannabis appear to get slightly more respiratory infections, such as colds and flu, than those whose parents just smoke tobacco or don’t smoke at all. The effect may come from children breathing in second-hand marijuana smoke, says Adam Johnson at Wake Forest School of Medicine in North Carolina. “It would make any [respiratory] virus more symptomatic because you have a child’s lungs being exposed to irritants.” Children who breathe in second-hand tobacco smoke are known to have more respiratory illnesses, such as asthma, which has led some countries to ban people from smoking in cars with children present. But the effects of cannabis smoke exposure are less studied, especially as people tend to smoke fewer marijuana cigarettes per day than they do tobacco cigarettes.

Children exposed to second-hand marijuana smoke may experience viral respiratory infections

Children exposed to second-hand marijuana smoke may experience viral respiratory infections Children whose parents regularly smoke or vape marijuana may experience viral respiratory infections, such as the common cold, more frequently than those whose parents do not smoke, according to a study published in the journal Pediatric Research. Researchers from Wake Forest School of Medicine and Children s Hospital Colorado, USA surveyed 1,491 parents and caregivers who lived in Colorado, a US state where recreational and medicinal use of marijuana is legal. The researchers found that parents who regularly smoked or vaped marijuana reported that their children experienced more viral respiratory infections in the year prior to the survey, compared to children whose parents did not smoke tobacco or marijuana. Parents who smoked or vaped marijuana reported that their children had not experienced other conditions often related to second-hand tobacco smoke exposure, such as ear infections an

Nona Holzwarth | Obituary | Greenville Herald Banner

Nona Holzwarth | Obituary | Greenville Herald Banner
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