For Patients
Information for Smokers
First Published: 1995
Last Revised: 2002
Peer Review Status: Internally Reviewed by Cancer Center Staff
Thinking About Quitting?
Quitting smoking isn't
easy, but it can be done - more than 41 million Americans have stopped - and
it could be the most important thing you'll ever do for your health.
Health Benefits of Quitting
- People who quit smoking live longer than those who continue to smoke.
- Quitting smoking decreases the risk of man diseases, including lung and
other cancers, heart disease, stroke, ulcers, chronic lung diseases, and respiratory
illness.
- Your body begins to heal itself rapidly when you quit smoking. Levels of
carbon monoxide and nicotine decline, sense of taste and smell improve, and
breathing becomes easier, all within 72 hours.
- Women who quit smoking before becoming pregnant or within the first 3-4
months of pregnancy reduce the risk of giving birth to premature and/ or low
birth rate infants.
Books
There are many good books about smoking and smoking cessation. Check your local
bookstore and library. Here are just a few examples:
- The No-Nag, No-Guilt, Do-It-Your-Own-Way Guide to Quitting Smoking,
by Tom Ferguson, M.D.
- I'll Quit Tomorrow, by Vernon Johnson
- Smoking for Two: Cigarettes and Pregnancy, by Peter A. Fried
Smoking Facts
- Smoking kills more people every year than heroin, cocaine, alcohol, AIDS, fires,
suicide and automobile accidents combined!
- Nine out of ten smokers say they would like to quit if they could find a way
of doing so.
- The average weight gain among people who quit smoking is only 3-5 lbs.
- The economic cost of a lifetime of smoking is staggering. At $2.00/pack, a
pack a day smoker will spend $29,200 over 40 years, just for cigarettes. At
two packs a day, the total would be $58,400 over the same time period. Increased
health care costs and lower productivity are additional hidden costs.
Quit Tips
- Don't be discouraged if your first attempts to quit aren't successful. Many
smokers have to try several times before quitting permanently.
- No one approach is right for everyone. Experiment with different ones until
you find the one that works for you.
- Set a quit date and stick to it. Try to choose a time where outside stresses
will be minimized.
- Add walking or other exercise to your daily routine.
- Eat regular meals to keep your blood sugar even. Hunger may increase the urge
to smoke.
- Avoid or limit sugar, alcohol and caffeine, which can also increase the urge
to smoke. Drink lots of water.
- When the urge to smoke comes, breathe deeply for a few minutes.
- Put the money you would have spent on cigarettes in a jar each day you don't
smoke, and use that money to buy a reward for yourself.
- Enjoy being a nonsmoker!
This guide neither recommends nor endorses any specific resource
on this list. Information is provided as a service and consumers are urged to
make their own judgments.
See related Patient Textbooks about Cancer Center or Internal Medicine.
See related Patient Topics Cancer Center, Internal Medicine, Preventing Disease and Staying Healthy, Pulmonary, Smoking Cessation, Substance Abuse or Wellness and Lifestyle.
See related Provider Textbooks about Cancer Center or Internal Medicine.
See related Provider Topics Cancer Center, Internal Medicine, Preventing Disease and Staying Healthy, Pulmonary, Smoking Cessation, Substance Abuse or Wellness and Lifestyle.
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