You will inhale just as much as you were puffing on one
definitely. second hand smoke contains many chemicals and some references state it is more harmful than the inhaled smoke. Plus, the child did not choose to be in this position.
You still inhale the dangerous chemicals that first hand smoke makes you inhale. There are way too many dangers to list here - try searching it on the internet.
Second-hand smoke harms everyone, not just children. Cigarette smoke contains many poisonous chemicals, which build up in the lungs and cause cancer and other disease.
None, because second hand smoke cannot kill you whatsoever. The amount of smoke that you'd have to be exposed to would be an extraordinary amount.
OVER 9000
It's kind of scary actually, because anytime you're around a smoker, you're breathing in second-hand smoke. You also get the 43 cancer causing chemicals in the smoke. Since you're around a cigarette, you become a passive smoker because you inhale sidestream and mainstream smoke. Sidestream smoke-smoke coming from the burning tip of a cigarette Mainstream Smoke-smoke coming from the smokers lungs
3
No One.
Nobody does. Second hand smoke is not a certifiable cause of death. Any figures quoted are merely conjecture and pure propaganda.
about 1,112,692,783,257 people die from it
If the intent of the question is how many individual persons have been determined to have died as a cause of exposure to second hand smoke, the answer is none.
It not only hurts you but every innocent person around you who doesn't want to smoke. Every one who breathes in second-hand smoke is endangering their health, but young children are particularly at risk as their lungs are smaller and more delicate. They are, therefore, seriously affected by tobacco smoke and the chemicals it contains. Young people exposed to second-hand smoke at home are seven times more likely to smoke. Second-hand smoke contains cancer-causing and other toxic substances that are often in greater concentrations than in the smoke inhaled by the smoker. Some chemical compounds found in smoke only become carcinogenic after they've come into contact with certain enzymes found in many of the tissues of the human body, so the smoke that is breathed out may be worse than the smoke breathed in by the smoker through the cigarette.