Today, I received this letter as an employee of Floyd Memorial Hospital regarding the new anti-smoking ordinance going into effect on 7/1/06. We are hearing more and more about companies and organizations that are taking a tough stance on smoking. Some companies have now taken the position that they will not employ smokers, which includes random urine screening for enforcement. The major purpose of this stance is to lower their potential financial losses commonly associated with smoking-related illnesses.
Many people will say that their rights are being violated. Some even go so far as to quit a job before being �forced� into quitting. I�m embarrassed to say that if I were still a smoker caught in the web of addiction, I might take the same stubborn position of refusing to be forced to quit. Joe saw this letter and commented on it this evening and my response was, �It�s a shame, isn�t it?� (tongue in cheek, of course and with an evil grin on my face). I never thought I would get to the point where I truly resent other people blowing smoke in the same space where I�m breathing, but I have. Nobody should have to be forced to consent to breathe second-hand smoke. I�m sorry�but every comment ever voiced by nonsmokers, that I snubbed in the past, is true! I would never berate a smoker, because I too have walked that path. However, I have become a staunch supporter of all anti-smoking legislation.
I�m interested in hearing everyone else�s opinion on this. Please feel free to express yourself honestly.
[b]January 11, 2006
Dear Floyd Memorial Associate:
In mid-January, Floyd Memorial will join other local hospitals in signing an ordinance to make its campus tobacco-free in 2006. The ordinance will be signed in mid-January with the tobacco-free policy going into effect on July 1, 2006. Local hospitals committed to this endeavor include Floyd Memorial, Clark Memorial, Harrison County, Kings� Daughters� and Southern Indiana Rehab.
This unified effort was made with the health of our southern Indiana residents in mind. Nationally, we are seeing more and more restaurants and public facilities adopting a smoke-free environment. It only makes sense for health care providers to adopt this same policy to protect the health and well-being of its patients, vis