Trying to quit smoking? Forget nicotine patches and gum
- Reported, January 11, 2012
(Ivanhoe
Newswire) -- If you're trying to quit smoking you may want to try something else
besides nicotine replacement therapies (NRTs). Specifically nicotine patches and
nicotine gum, do not appear to be effective in helping smokers quit long-term,
even when combined with smoking cessation counseling, according to a new study
by researchers at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and the University of
Massachusetts Boston.
"What this study shows is the need for the Food and Drug Administration, which
oversees regulation of both medications to help smokers quit and tobacco
products, to approve only medications that have been proven to be effective in
helping smokers quit in the long-term and to lower nicotine in order to reduce
the addictiveness of cigarettes," co-author Gregory Connolly, director of the
Center for Global Tobacco Control at HSPH, was quoted as saying.
In the prospective cohort study the researchers, including lead author Hillel
Alpert, research scientist at HSPH, and co-author Lois Biener of the University
of Massachusetts Boston's Center for Survey Research, followed 787 adult smokers
in Massachusetts who had recently quit smoking. The participants were surveyed
over three time periods: 2001-2002, 2003-2004, and 2005-2006. Participants were
asked whether they had used a nicotine replacement therapy in the form of the
nicotine patch (placed on the skin), nicotine gum, nicotine inhaler, or nasal
spray to help them quit, and if so, what was the longest period of time they had
used the product continuously. They also were asked if they had joined a
quit-smoking program or received help from a doctor, counselor, or other
professional.
The results showed that, for each time period, almost one-third of recent
quitters reported to have relapsed. The researchers found no difference in
relapse rate among those who used NRT for more than six weeks, with or without
professional counseling. No difference in quitting success with use of NRT was
found for either heavy or light smokers.
"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
was quoted as saying.
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.
Smoking cessation medications have been available over the counter since 1996,
yet U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that the
previous adult smoking rate decline and quitting rates have stalled in the past
five years.
SOURCE: Tobacco Control, January 9, 2012
-
WF Team
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