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By Kathy Adams
PORTSMOUTH
Portsmouth Naval Medical Center is clearing the air.
During the next five months, the hospital will phase out 15 of its outdoor smoking areas, eventually leaving only two areas where tobacco use will be allowed, Rear Adm. Matthew Nathan, the facility's commander, announced Monday. Smoking is already prohibited inside clinical buildings.
"We work very hard to take care of and to restore the health of people who have been affected by tobacco," Nathan said. "So if we're going to do that and we're going to create an atmosphere of good health and health prevention, then it really is incumbent upon us to have an environment where our staff and our patients can be in a smoke-free environment."
The phase-out will begin Monday, when the center will close four designated smoking areas, and will continue through Nov. 20, the day of the Great American Smokeout. Only residents living in the barracks and employees hired before July 1 will be allowed to smoke or chew tobacco in the remaining two designated areas.
In addition, the Navy Exchange on site will stop selling tobacco products once its existing stock is gone.
The medical center is one of the first military installations to pass such a wide-ranging
tobacco-free policy, although the Air Force and other individual bases have proposed similar restrictions.
Many of the medical center's nonsmokers applaud the effort, while its smokers have mixed reactions. An employee survey showed that 84 percent of the staff support a tobacco-free policy.
But only about 25 percent of smokers do, said Cmdr. Ed Simmer, director of quality management for the center.
Opponents pointed out that the current designated smoking areas are located where people can easily avoid them when approaching building entrances.
"It's stupid," Seaman Arnell Jackson, a Portsmouth corpsman, said while smoking in a designated area outside of the hospital's emergency room. "I think people should be able to do whatever they feel like on their breaks."
Seaman Tayler Fuentes said she also opposes the planned changes because they're inconsistent with Navywide regulations.
"I just think it should be fair across the board," said the corpsman, who is working to gradually quit smoking. "I think it's ridiculous because I came off a ship, and we were able to smoke" on it.
Several smokers said the restrictions would encourage people to cut down on smoking at work but not quit altogether. For those who decide to quit, the medical center is offering additional classes and free medications.
"We're doing this both to present a better ambiance of smoke-free living as well as perhaps to incentivize those folks who have been waiting for just that one thing to get them to quit," Nathan said.
He said that enforcement will start with trusting people who obey the new rules. "We're trying to do this in a way that gingerly balances the needs of individuals that have a tough habit to kick," Nathan said. "Let us help them do it."
Kathy Adams, (757) 446-2583, kathy.adams@pilotonline.com

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Almost Smoke-free is a Good Start!
I am extremely proud of Portsmouth Naval for reducing their designated smoking areas. I am even more proud, and in fact rather astonished, that the hospital exchange will stop selling tobacco products as soon as their inventory is depleted. The more organizations that support those of us who care about our health (I love Sentara Bayside Hospital's sign claiming they are 100% tobacco free) the more smokers will realize most of us are fed up with their filthy habit! Smokers, get help. And don't cry that "I'm addicted" nonsense. Millions of us were addicted and were able to quit. You can, too!
Think about it for a moment..
..why would a health care facility that treats (at great cost to the taxpayers) illnesses directly attributable to smoking, support said habit by providing smoking areas and making tobacco products available? NMCP's actions simply make sense.
Freedom.
" People only care when it bothers them directly.
Perhaps you want to ban smoking yet have a booming stereo in you vehicle. I feel it should be illegal as I should not be made to suffer at traffic lights listening to that caca! Perhaps you like watching adult movies on cable but someone else wants it banned! Perhaps to want to ban smoking but drive a 13 mpg SUV, why should I suffer high gas prices because you use more than I do and pollute our air more? Ban them!
Get my point here?
I do not go to loud restaurants but do not try to have a law passed on noise levels! What about noisy kids at the movies? Ban them? I personally think underwear exposed due to pants hanging under the buttocks makes you look like a ignorant sheep but do I want the way you dress banned? no!
FREEDOM to choose and do as one wants with ones self and property which includes the owner of a business to do as he/she see's fit with there personal pro
Let's be fair
All adults should have equal rights, the right to clean air, and the right to smoke filled polluted air. A designated smoking area should be provided, maybe out back and away from the main body of people but a place that smokers can have their polluted air if they want it. Besides normally within a 15' dia. the smoke will be up and above most people anyway. So why not be a little more forgiving and let everyone be happy. Just think, should it be decided that chocolate ice cream is not real healthy. Would you be willing to give it up without a fight? Yes I am a NON SMOKER but I belive in being fair too.
Portsmouth goes smoke free.
I'm glad to see every location that is going smoke free. The idiots that want to destroy their breathing can do it in their own home. I shouldn't have to worry every time I go somewhere about having to breathing in second hand smoke. Good job Portsmouth, lets hope the rest of the country follows suit and kicks smokers out of every public establishment.
It's not real news until.....
it can report the hospital is COMPLETELY smoke-free! Any facility which allows any smoking should relegate the smokers to the outside BACK of the building. Not at the entrance where non-smokers or those with breathing problems must enter.
It is about time! Why do
It is about time! Why do smokers continue to feel that they have some kind of "right" to pollute the air I breathe. I was in Joe's Crab Shack in Hampton yesterday and after being seated specifically, in the non-smoking section, I was subjected to 3 smokers not 2 feet away blowing their after dinner smoke in my dinner area. The table beside me had an infant and were also upset about the smoke cloud being blown in our "non-smoking area". If the resturant advertises the area as non-smoking then it should be non-smoking...not almost non-smoking. Why can not the resturants put up glass enclosures, just like at airports, and then the smokers can rebreathe the smoke they so cherish without pushing their dirty habit (addiction) on me and all others that do not want their smoke.
"going almost tobacco-free"
Now if only the cities of Hampton Roads will follow suit!
Land of the only if we let you.
And the home of the subdued!