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Letter: Smokers' clean air

Published 6 April 2005

From Rowan Fothergill

You draw attention to the need for better ventilation on passenger planes during outbreaks of diseases such as SARS (19 March, p 15). When smoking was permitted on aircraft, cabin air was circulated and replaced to a far greater extent than at present. Banning smoking on aircraft in effect greatly reduced the air quality, as airlines took advantage of every cost-cutting measure available in order to bring us the low cost of air travel we have today.

A few more pounds on an air ticket is a very small price to pay when compared with the potential impact of human-transmissible SARS travelling around the world in less than 24 hours.

Birmingham, UK

Issue no. 2494 published 9 April 2005

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