July 14, 2008 4:30 PM
- Text
Smoking-Cessation Aids Beat Cold Turkey
A student smokes a cigarette in a cafe in Paris, Tuesday Oct. 3, 2006 in Paris. A parliamentary panel in cigarette-friendly France called Tuesday for the government to ban smoking in public places like cafes and restaurants in less than a year and floated the prospect of special "smoking rooms." (AP)
Smoking-cessation drugs and many nicotine-replacement therapies are more than twice as effective at helping smokers quit than going it alone.
A new analysis of 69 studies comparing seven different smoking-cessation treatments shows six of the seven treatments were more effective than placebo in helping smokers quit the habit for at least six months to a year.
But researchers say smoking-cessation therapies are underused because of problems translating those results to the public and providing widespread access to the treatments.
"We are confident that the recommended treatments will substantially increase rates of smoking abstinence when given to smokers who wish to quit," researcher John Cunningham of Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, says in a news release.
For example, Cunningham says these results suggest that offering free nicotine-replacement therapy to adults who want to quit smoking could provide major public health benefits.
Helping Smokers Quit
In the study, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, researchers compared 69 clinical trials on smoking- cessation therapies involving nearly 33,000 people.
The results showed six therapies were more effective than placebo at helping smokers quit, including:
Although the findings also favored the effectiveness of the nicotine inhaler over placebo, the results were not conclusive.
In a related article in the same journal, Canadian researchers randomly surveyed 825 smokers and asked them if they would be interested in receiving free nicotine-replacement therapy and how they would use it. Nearly 60% of smokers said they would be interested in receiving free nicotine-replacement therapy, and 94% of the interested smokers said they would use it to quit smoking for good.
In fact, researchers found smokers who were interested in quitting smoking for good were more interested in using nicotine-replacement therapy than those who planned to cut back or maintain their smoking habits.
Experts say these results suggest that new strategies to inform smokers who want to quit about their options may be needed to improve use of smoking-cessation therapies.
"Because of a powerful multinational tobacco industry, the need to prevent death and disability from tobacco-related illnesses will not disappear, writes J. Taylor Hayes, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in a commentary in the same journal. "However, we have effective treatments to assist smokers at their attempts to live free of tobacco. The success of our efforts hinges on our ability to place these products in the hands of people who need them."
By Jennifer Warner
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved
© 2008 WebMD, LLC.. All Rights Reserved. A new analysis of 69 studies comparing seven different smoking-cessation treatments shows six of the seven treatments were more effective than placebo in helping smokers quit the habit for at least six months to a year.
But researchers say smoking-cessation therapies are underused because of problems translating those results to the public and providing widespread access to the treatments.
"We are confident that the recommended treatments will substantially increase rates of smoking abstinence when given to smokers who wish to quit," researcher John Cunningham of Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, says in a news release.
For example, Cunningham says these results suggest that offering free nicotine-replacement therapy to adults who want to quit smoking could provide major public health benefits.
Helping Smokers Quit
In the study, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, researchers compared 69 clinical trials on smoking- cessation therapies involving nearly 33,000 people.
The results showed six therapies were more effective than placebo at helping smokers quit, including:
- Chantix (2.4 times more effective than placebo)
- Nicotine nasal spray (2.37)
- Zyban (also known as Wellbutrin) (2.07)
- Nicotine patch (2.07)
- Nicotine tablet (2.06)
- Nicotine gum (1.71)
Although the findings also favored the effectiveness of the nicotine inhaler over placebo, the results were not conclusive.
In a related article in the same journal, Canadian researchers randomly surveyed 825 smokers and asked them if they would be interested in receiving free nicotine-replacement therapy and how they would use it. Nearly 60% of smokers said they would be interested in receiving free nicotine-replacement therapy, and 94% of the interested smokers said they would use it to quit smoking for good.
In fact, researchers found smokers who were interested in quitting smoking for good were more interested in using nicotine-replacement therapy than those who planned to cut back or maintain their smoking habits.
Experts say these results suggest that new strategies to inform smokers who want to quit about their options may be needed to improve use of smoking-cessation therapies.
"Because of a powerful multinational tobacco industry, the need to prevent death and disability from tobacco-related illnesses will not disappear, writes J. Taylor Hayes, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in a commentary in the same journal. "However, we have effective treatments to assist smokers at their attempts to live free of tobacco. The success of our efforts hinges on our ability to place these products in the hands of people who need them."
By Jennifer Warner
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved
1 Comments +
Popular Now in Health
- NYC plans ban on sodas larger than 16 ounces
- FDA: High fructose corn syrup isn't "corn sugar"
- Smells like teen spirit? Age may have a scent
- Marvel creates "Blue Ear" superhero for deaf boy
- Less couch, more veggies tied to healthier habits
- Report: 10-year-old Colombian girl gives birth
- Men's offices more bacteria-ridden than women's?
- Taking aspirin cuts skin cancer risk, study shows
- Skin cancer self-exam: What to look for (PHOTOS)
- Consumer Reports rates top sunscreens for 2012
- Nerve stimulation lets spine-injured rats to walk
- Christina Hendricks: Too Big for Hollywood?
- Ga. woman battling flesh-eating bacteria speaks
- Obesity stigma still lingers after weight loss
- Birth control pills more likely to fail than IUDs
- Scientists reveal key childhood cancer data






