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Subject:
A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
Category: Health > Conditions and Diseases Asked by: pendleton-ga List Price: $2.00 |
Posted:
08 Nov 2003 20:40 PST
Expires: 08 Dec 2003 20:40 PST Question ID: 274004 |
Hello. A friend has asked for help on quitting smoking a pack a day. He has smoking about 10 years and is 26, married and no children yet. I would think that there are a couple of good web sites that give some good counsel, pros and cons of "patches" and "pills" etc. as well as just common sense advice. LMK what you got. Any of you that know me, know that I am pretty easy to please. If not, I just ask for clarifications. |
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Subject:
Re: A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
Answered By: boquinha-ga on 08 Nov 2003 23:07 PST Rated: |
Hello Pendleton-ga! What a pleasure it is to answer another question for you! And what a nice gesture and creative way to come up with different ideas for your friend in a most worthy cause! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Good Counsel and Common Sense Advice There seem to be mostly two schools of thought when sharing counsel and common sense: (1) dissemination of sound medical information and advice, and (2) blatant scare tactics. I?ve included links to both depending on your friend?s specific personality and needs. http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com/goodtips.htm This is a lengthy list of tips for quitting smoking. Some are in the form of personal affirmations (e.g., ?I am better than this habit,? etc.) and some are good, sound advice regarding withdrawals, cravings, and the like. My husband is considering printing off this list to share with his patients that express a desire to quit smoking. http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/how2quit.htm The CDC has links to various publications that are now available online containing approaches to tobacco cessation. This site also includes links to Surgeon General reports, research summaries, and tobacco cessation campaigns. http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com/benefits.htm Here is a list of benefits (some obvious, some not so obvious) that are derived from tobacco cessation. It orders them by time frame, starting with 20 minutes after quitting (lower blood pressure and pulse rate) and continues on to 15 years (risk of cardiovascular disease becomes that of a nonsmoker). http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com/skin.htm For the vain, here is an explanation of what smoking can do to one?s skin. http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com/lungphotos.htm Here are some scary pictures of smokers? lungs. Of course, these are mostly autopsy photos, sending a not-so-subtle hint. http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com/scary.htm This is a list of scary facts regarding the hazards of smoking. Most of the list focuses on various cancers that are due to tobacco smoke. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Pros and Cons of Patches, Pills, etc. http://www.docguide.com/dg.nsf/PrintPrint/7CF8F232FB073D3D8525672B00517A7E This is an article posted at Doctor?s Guide, an online medical news site, that talks about a clinical trial comparing nicotine replacement (i.e., ?the patch?) with Zyban, a prescription drug used in tobacco cessation. The long and the short of it is that Zyban proved to be more effective than both nicotine replacement alone and placebo. The side effects of Zyban were comparable to placebo and nicotine replacement. Your friend can read the full article for details of the study. http://www.aafp.org/afp/20010601/2251ph.html%2c From the American Academy of Family Physicians, this is a patient handout describing the various methods of nicotine replacement that are available (gum, patch, nasal spray). It lists the benefits and also the drawbacks of each method. http://www.medpharmacy.com This online pharmacy lists the price of Zyban (along with other prescription medications). Thirty pills cost $119 and 60 pills cost $179. Zyban is usually taken twice daily, so 60 pills represent a one-month supply. Of course if your friend?s insurance covers the prescription this may not accurately represent his out-of-pocket cost. This price seems to be a fairly consistent price among other online pharmacies. The cost of Nicotine replacement varies significantly since there are many forms, and most of those forms are available without a prescription. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Online Support Groups I found a couple of good sites that sponsor free online support groups. Each site has similar features so your friend can peruse each and decide which one best meets his needs. http://www.quitnet.com This is a site that began in 1995 (it claims to be the first online tobacco cessation site) and provides personalized cessation programs, online support groups, testimonials, ?anniversary? celebrations, counseling services, various informational ?brochures,? and much, much more. http://www.quitsmokingsupport.com This site also has online support groups, and additionally offers newsletters and daily email alerts, links to useful resources, tobacco cessation products, and of course, plenty of educational material. I found much of their material to be useful in answering this question in particular. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Thank you for an interesting question! I wish you well in helping your friend and wish your friend the best in attaining his goal to quit smoking. You said ?no children yet? in your question?if they are planning to have children, this is indeed one of the greatest things he can do to prepare a safe and healthy environment for his family. Best wishes to you and yours. If anything is unclear, please let me know how I can clarify the information for you. You are, indeed, a great customer. Thank you, again! Sincerely, Boquinha-ga Search Terms Used: quit smoking tobacco cessation patch versus zyban cost zyban cost nicotine replacement |
pendleton-ga
rated this answer:
Hello Boquinha. Wow what a great research you did!!! Thanks ever so much. There much food for thought and many, varied, excellent ideas, thoughts, etc. Great job! BTW--- I don't have a Pennsylvania map yet. I applied twice, but now that I think of it, I may have put my Texas (I live in Mexico)address. FYI-- I read your chemistry work. Cool. I am a chemist by training and thought that was neat what that father did for his daughter and what you researched. Your answers were right on! Kind took my back in a time warp. smile. God bless you to know and do His will! John P. |
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Subject:
Re: A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
From: answerbot-ga on 08 Nov 2003 20:44 PST |
Check out the picture here: http://www.hd.co.harris.tx.us/tobacco/smokelungs.htm |
Subject:
Re: A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
From: boquinha-ga on 09 Nov 2003 15:49 PST |
Hello John! Thank you for your kind words and 5-star rating! It is a pleasure to do research for you! As for the PA maps, I hope you can get them soon--we're enjoying our packets and learning and enjoying so much!! Did you know that there are working farm bed and breakfasts here?? I even got to answer a question about them, using those packets as a reference! So, I'm especially grateful for your PA question! And that's interesting that you're a chemist! I don't usually do blatant homework questions (nor do I personally feel okay with it ethically), but I made an exception with that case. I sincerely hope that the information helped that parent help his child. Best wishes to you and your friend! Sincerely, Boquinha-ga |
Subject:
Re: A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
From: byrd-ga on 11 Nov 2003 06:46 PST |
Hi John, I didn't see your question earlier. Wish I had. Boquinha has given you some great information and a lot of good links. Hopefully your friend will find at least some of them useful. However, as a former smoker, I'd just like to pass along a bit of additional advice based on personal experience. I was a very heavy (3+ packs/day) smoker for 30 years and quit cold turkey more than 7 years ago. It was without a doubt the most horrible experience of my life. I happen to be extremely strongwilled or I doubt I'd have succeeded. And even now I'll say that had I known what I was letting myself in for, I would never have tried to quit. No, I won't go back to it now, and let all that suffering be for naught, but tell your friend it simply WON'T be a walk in the park no matter what the "authorities" or his/her well-intentioned friends might say. Now, all smokers are different, and for those whose habit is just that, a mere habit, much of the conventional advice will work without the terrible physical and mental suffering I went through. But for those who truly have developed a dependence on nicotine it simply will not. Tell your friend to be prepared for a host of physical, mental and emotional symptoms. In my case I thought I'd developed some dread disease and even the doctor merely shrugged when I asked whether quitting smoking had anything to do with how I felt. "Oh, that takes a little time," she said. "Don't you feel better now that you've quit?" Aaarrrggg. I've found out since that that's typical. When someone tries to quit, a few weeks into it they'll start getting those same well-intentioned remarks: "Now, aren't you glad you quit? Don't you feel so much better?" Aaarrgghh I say again. NO, you don't feel better. You feel terrible and then some. To those do-gooders I say, "Get a clue, folks. People don't smoke because it makes them feel bad. QUITTING makes them feel bad; not the other way around!" Good grief. As for emotional symptoms, well I turned mean as a snake and no, it didn't pass in a couple of weeks. It lasted months, while I ricocheted between suicidal and practically homicidal and every nasty state in between. Mentally? Well, all I can say is I'm not now, nor will I ever be the same. I just cannot think like I could before. My mind is less than it was, and that's that. Nicotine is NOT like other drugs, forget that notion put forth by the media and others. Not only can a person function and function extremely well while using nicotine, a heavy smoker has (through a well-documented biological process resulting in the physical creation of additional dopamine receptors) accustomed his/her body to a certain level, not just of nicotine, but of the dopamine that is stimulated/released by the nicotine. He/she NEEDS that level just to function NORMALLY. Deprive a smoker of nicotine and you deprive his body of dopamine, the lack of which results in these awful symptoms. Yes, in time, the body adjusts. But it's not quick and anybody who expects it to be is heading for failure. In my case it took almost three YEARS before I began feeling anywhere near normal again. Furthermore, I'd likely have fallen off my wagon had I not, a year into it, decided to get some Zyban. I took that for three months, and it turned the corner for me. Yes, I was a diehard case, I know that, and I'm not trying to be discouraging. But there is precious little factual information out there as to exactly what happens when someone tries to quit. I don't know if they think that by telling someone how awful it will be they won't be able to convince them to try or what. For my part, I think it's worse to lie - to say it will be fine in a couple of weeks and you'll be so happy and feel so good. When you don't, then you are more likely to give up than if you know the truth about the battle you're facing, and set about arming yourself with the right weapons. Tell your friend not to try it without the Zyban. Check out the research and testimonials on that - they're pretty right on. Ok, sorry to ramble so, but as you can tell, I have a strong opinion on this subject. Wish your friend all the best, and do encourage him/her that it IS possible - just going to be probably the most difficult thing he/she's ever done. Best of luck, Byrd |
Subject:
Re: A couple of good web site info about how to quit smoking?
From: boquinha-ga on 13 Dec 2003 19:21 PST |
Hello John! Posting to say, "Happy Holidays!" Sincerely, Boquinha-ga |
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