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Despite nearly 40 years of warnings about the harmful effects
of tobacco use and numerous public health campaigns, one in four
Americans still smokes. That's a testament to the power of
tobacco addiction and to the need for new ways to help people
quit tobacco.
Figures from the U.S. Public Health Service help round out
the picture:
- Tobacco use kills about 430,000 Americans each year,
making it the country's leading cause of death and disease.
- Smoking prevalence among adolescents has risen
dramatically since 1990, with more than 3,000 children and
adolescents becoming regular users of tobacco each day.
- Thirty-nine percent of tobacco-related death takes place
in women -- a percentage that has more than doubled since
1965. Lung cancer is the number one killer of American
women, surpassing breast cancer.
- Medical care costs attributable to smoking have been
estimated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
to be more than $50 billion annually, and tobacco use leads
to a loss of earnings and productivity of about $47 billion
yearly.
Such figures qualify tobacco dependence as a public health
epidemic, creating an acute need for intervention to save lives.
Ironically, the people most qualified to intervene --
physicians and other health care clinicians -- usually have not
done so. One study reported that only 15 percent of smokers who
saw a physician were offered help with quitting tobacco. Only 21
percent of practicing physicians say that they have received
adequate training to help their patients stop smoking, according
to a survey of U.S. medical schools.
Today the opportunities to intervene are much improved.
"Current treatments for tobacco dependence offer clinicians
their greatest single opportunity to halt the loss of life,
health, and happiness caused by this chronic condition,"
note the authors of Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence,
a clinical practice guideline released in 2000 by the U.S.
Public Health Service. The guidelines were established to help
patients quit tobacco and are based on a comprehensive review of
the medical literature published from 1975 to 1999.
Most prominent in the updated guidelines is the fact that
there are more medical treatments than ever before to help
people quit.
To begin, the guidelines list four kinds of nicotine
replacement therapy: nicotine gum, the nicotine inhaler,
nicotine nasal spray, and the nicotine patch. Technically known
as nicotine replacement therapies, these treatments aim to
diminish the symptoms of withdrawal for people attempting to
quit smoking. They work by allowing people to consume nicotine
in steadily decreasing doses. All of them provide nicotine
without the toxins found in cigarette smoke.
The guidelines also recommend three medications to reduce
nicotine withdrawal symptoms: the antidepressant bupropion (Zyban),
the most commonly prescribed non-nicotine medication to deal
with tobacco dependence, and clonidine and nortriptyline, two
second-line medications that require more medical supervision.
In addition, the guidelines highly endorse counseling and
behavioral therapies for everyone who tries to quit tobacco.
Counseling can help people solve problems such as weight gain
and mood changes after quitting tobacco. Through counseling,
people can also learn how to gain support from relatives,
friends, and coworkers.
The guidelines offer strong evidence that tobacco cessation
treatments are both effective and cost-effective relative to
other medical and disease prevention interventions. It
recommends that insurance plans reimburse for the cost of
tobacco treatments.
Dr. Michael Fiore, director of the Center for Tobacco
Research and Intervention at the University of Wisconsin Medical
School in Madison, headed the expert panel that developed Treating
Tobacco Use and Dependence. He is upbeat about the odds for
those who want to become tobacco-free, citing research that four
out of 10 smokers can successfully quit. "If this 40
percent quit rate is applied for people who try repeatedly,
there is a very high likelihood that any smoker committed to
quitting can do so successfully," said Fiore.
To view a summary of the clinical practice guidelines, go
online to http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/tobacco/smokesum.htm.
If you want to quit tobacco, you can draw on many resources
for information and strategies. Here are a few places to start:
- American Heart Association, (800) 242-8721, www.americanheart.org
- American Cancer Society, (800) 320-3333, www.cancer.org www.cancer.org
- American Lung Association, (800) 586-4872,www.lungusa.org
- National Cancer Institute, (800) 422-6237, www.nci.nih.gov
- Nicotine Anonymous, (415) 750-0328, www.nicotine-anonymous.org
--Published November 5, 2001
Alive & Free is a chemical health column provided by
Hazelden, a nonprofit agency based in Center City, Minn., that
offers a wide range of information and services relating to
addiction and recovery. For more resources on substance abuse,
call Hazelden at 1-888-535-9485 or check its Web site at www.hazelden.org.
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