Monday, January 16, 2012

Help with Nicotine Withdrawal

Shedding the Ball and Chain of Nicotine Addiction

Physical withdrawal from nicotine, while intense, is short-lived.? Use the tips below to help you navigate this phase of smoking cessation and look in on how others have managed it as well.

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER YOU QUIT SMOKING...


Immediate rewards

Within 12 hours after you have your last cigarette, your body will begin to heal itself. The levels of carbon monoxide and nicotine in your system will decline rapidly, and your heart and lungs will begin to repair the damage caused by cigarette smoke.

Within a few days, you'll probably begin to notice some remarkable changes in your body. Your sense of smell and taste may improve. You'll breathe easier, and your smoker's hack will begin to disappear, although you may notice that you still cough for a while. And you'll be free from the mess, smell, inconvenience, expense, and dependence of cigarette smoking.

Immediate effects

As your body begins to repair itself, instead of feeling better right away, you may feel worse for a while. It's important to understand that healing is a process - it begins immediately, but it continues over time. These "withdrawal pangs" are really symptoms of the RECOVERY process (see "Withdrawal Symptoms and Activities That Might Help).

Immediately after quitting, many ex-smokers experience "symptoms of recovery" such as temporary weight gain caused by fluid retention, irregularity, and dry, sore gums or tongue. You may feel edgy, hungry, more tired, and more short-tempered than usual and have trouble sleeping and notice that you're coughing a lot. These symptoms are the result of your body clearing itself of nicotine, a powerful addictive chemical. Most nicotine is gone from the body in 2-3 days.

It's important to understand that the unpleasant after-effects of quitting are only temporary and signal the beginning of a healthier life. Now that you've quit, you've added a number of healthy productive days to each year of your life. Most important, you've greatly improved your chances for a longer life. You've significantly reduced your risk of death from heart disease, stroke, chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and several kinds of cancer - not just lung cancer. (Cigarette smoking is responsible every year for approximately 130,000 deaths from cancer, 170,000 deaths from heart disease, and 50,000 deaths from lung disease.)
Click Here! To Quit Smoking

After The Last Cigarette...

...The Benefits Begin!

It is never
too late to quit smoking.
If you've smoked for a long time and worry that quitting won't make any difference for you, think again. The physical benefits begin within just 20 minutes, and continue on for years.

After The Last Cigarette

Quitting tobacco is a smart and loving choice for yourself, regardless of how long you've smoked.


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Smoking and Vitamin Depletion

Smoking creates an abundance of free radicals in the body,? unstable molecules that are associated with cell and DNA damage.? Antioxidants such as Vitamin C and E help offset that damage, but smoking depletes these helpers, a double whammy for smokers.

Smoking and Vitamin Depletion

Free radical damage creates an environment in the body that may lead to chronic diseases like cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

12 Tips to Quit Smoking for New Year's

Most of us have had "Quit Smoking" on our list of resolutions for the new year more than once. And most of us have avoided adding it to the list, feeling guilty and unhappily chained to nicotine addiction as we watched the new year come and go.

If you'd like to put smoking behind you for good in 2012, you've come to the right place. Use the tools here at About.com Smoking Cessation to educate yourself about what to expect from smoking cessation.

And stop in at our busy support forum as well. Browse the discussions and if you'd like to jump in, register (free) and join the conversation. Make a lasting success of this New Year's resolution to quit smoking. You can do it, and we're here to help you all the way.


Click Here! To Quit Smoking

NRTs Not Useful as a Quit Smoking Aid?

According to study results published January 9, 2012 in an advance online edition of Tobacco Control
, researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and UMass Boston have found that nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) appears to have a relapse rate of about one-third for ex-smokers who use them.
All of? the? 787 participants in the study were adult smokers who had recently quit.?? They were surveyed? on three occasions -- 2001-2002, 2003-2004, and 2005-2006 about whether they had used NRTs (including the patch, gum, inhaler and nasal spray) to quit smoking, and if yes, what the longest period of time was that they'd used the product.? They were also asked whether they had sought professional help from a doctor, counselor or program? to quit smoking.

For each time period surveyed,? close to one-third of recent quitters had relapsed.? Study authors Hillel Alpert, research scientist at HSPH and? Lois Biener of UMass Boston's Center for Survey Research? found there to be no difference in relapse rates if the people had been heavy or light smokers, or used NRTs for more than six weeks,? with or without counseling.

"This study shows that using NRT is no more effective in helping people stop smoking cigarettes in the long-term than trying to quit on one's own," Alpert said. He added that even though clinical trials (studies) have found NRT to be effective, the new findings demonstrate the importance of empirical studies regarding effectiveness when used in the general population.

Researchers pointed out that NRTs are not a "magic pill" for success, suggesting that increasing cigarette taxes might be more effective as an incentive to quit.? They also think? policymakers should consider shifting focus away from providing funding for NRTs and put the money into anti-smoking campaigns.

HSPH Press Release

Are NRTs an Effective Quit Aid?

Before you abandon NRTs if you're using them, or cross them off the list of potential quit aids if you haven't stopped smoking yet,? remember that quit aids are just that - aids/helpers.
With a well-rounded quit program that includes education and support, any of them have the ability to help us succeed,? NRTs included.
We are fortunate to live in a time when there are so many choices available to help us quit smoking, because just as no two people are alike, neither are their quit programs.? Where cold turkey might work well for one person, NRTs are the answer for another.

Human life is being extinguished due to tobacco use at the rate of one precious and irreplaceable soul every 8 seconds somewhere on the planet, day in and day out.? If NRTs help one-third of those who use them to quit smoking for the long-term, how can that be anything but a plus?

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