Osaka expo changes no-smoking policy, will set up 2 smoking areas
The lack of accessible smoking spots had prompted some World Exposition staff and participants to smoke in unauthorised areas. PHOTO: REUTERS
– The organiser of the World Exposition in Osaka has decided to set up two smoking areas within the event's venue by early June, reversing its earlier no-smoking policy.
Until now, those who wished to smoke had to leave the 155ha venue and go to one of two designated areas outside its east gate. The lack of accessible smoking spots prompted some staff and participants to smoke in unauthorised areas.
The organising committee said it made the decision after staff who smoke complained about the inconvenience of walking across the large venue to reach the smoking areas.
One of the new smoking areas will be set up on the western side of the venue, according to the committee.
Health experts say one of the two existing smoking areas outside the east gate is already exposing others to secondhand smoke, and they argue that allowing smoking, even in designated areas, runs counter to the Osaka expo's theme of building a sustainable society and improving lives.
'We live in a world where a smoking ban in public places is a common practice,' said Mr Bungaku Watanabe, director of the non-profit organisation Japan Society for Tobacco Control.
'It would be best to totally ban smoking at the expo,' he added. KYODO NEWS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
26 minutes ago
- Straits Times
When melody meets medicine: A look at Singapore's growing music therapy scene
A burgeoning scene here, music therapy uses music to improve physical, emotional, cognitive and social well-being. ST PHOTO: BRIAN TEO SINGAPORE – It is not uncommon for musicians to have a dream stage. Perhaps a sold-out arena or a dim jazz bar steeped in soul. Mr Bakti Khair's is a hospital ward. Becoming a music therapist was a hope he held onto for more than seven years. Through being a primary school music teacher, getting married and becoming a father, the dream never wavered. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
7 hours ago
- Straits Times
Australia's Monash IVF reports second embryo incident in two months
Australia's Monash IVF reports second embryo incident in two months Australian fertility group Monash IVF on Tuesday reported a new incident related to an embryo transfer, within a couple of months after reporting a similar case where a doctor accidentally implanted the wrong embryo. The latest incident, which occurred on June 5 at the company's Clayton laboratory, has been reported to regulatory bodies and the company's insurer, Monash said, issuing an apology to the impacted couple. The company is also conducting an internal investigation. The firm added that it is implementing additional verification processes and patient confirmation safeguards to prevent similar incidents in the future. The clinic owner in April reported a similar incident where an Australian woman gave birth to a stranger's baby due to a Monash fertility doctor's error. Shares of Monash are down about 31% since the news. The mix-up has drawn attention to an industry that was largely self-regulated until recently and raised concerns about security protocols at IVF clinics. The facilities are regulated by a mix of Australian industry bodies and state government agencies. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
7 hours ago
- Straits Times
Looser gun laws tied to thousands more US child shooting deaths
Dr Jeremy Faust said firearm mortality rose and replaced car accidents as the leading cause of death in children over the age of one. PHOTO: REUTERS WASHINGTON - US states that loosened their gun laws following a landmark court ruling saw thousands more childhood firearm deaths than they otherwise would have – the vast majority homicides and suicides – according to a study published on June 9. Dr Jeremy Faust, an emergency physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and lead author of the paper in Jama Paediatrics, told AFP he was drawn to the topic as a father wondering whether today's world is safer for children than when he was growing up. 'Mortality from car accidents has fallen dramatically, but at the same time, firearm mortality rose and replaced car accidents as the leading cause of death in children over the age of one,' he said – a trend unique among peer nations. To probe this shift, Dr Faust and his colleagues analysed state-level data before and after McDonald v Chicago, the 2010 Supreme Court decision that extended the Second Amendment to state and local governments. The ruling sparked a wave of legislation, some tightening gun laws but much of it loosening them. The team grouped states into three categories – most permissive, permissive, and strict – and used Centres for Disease Control data on firearm deaths among children aged 0-17. They ran an 'excess mortality analysis,' comparing actual deaths from 2011 to 2023 against projections based on prior trends from 1999 to 2010 and population growth. The results were stark: more than 7,400 excess paediatric firearm deaths in states that loosened gun laws – including over 6,000 in the most permissive group of states. By contrast, the eight strictest states overall saw no excess deaths. The model predicted 4,267 fatalities, while 4,212 were recorded – a near-match that bolstered confidence in the analysis. 'The biggest thing people always want to know is, what's the intent behind these?' said Dr Faust. 'And I think what surprises most people is that accidents are a very small number of these deaths – it's mostly homicide and suicide.' While the study showed strong associations, it cannot prove causation – a key limitation. But in a test of whether broader increases in violence might explain the trend, rather than changes to the law, the team analysed non-firearm homicides and suicides and found no similar rise, a result that makes the findings 'pretty compelling,' said Dr Faust. Black children saw the steepest increases. While the reasons are unclear, the authors speculated that disparities in safe firearm storage could play a role. There were some exceptions. Deaths rose in Illinois and Connecticut despite tighter laws – though in the latter case, the spike was entirely attributable to the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting at an elementary school. 'Big picture, we have a major problem in this country,' said Dr Faust. 'But we also have a handful of states that are resisting these increases and, in fact, turning the other direction.' AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.