Resolve to quit
smoking in 2006
Newswise — Are you resolving
to quit smoking again this year? Anticipating that you will
fail might help you succeed.
“A more productive
approach than quitting cold turkey is to think about tobacco
dependence as a chronic disease, and expect that there might
be periods of relapse and remission,” says Patricia Daza,
PhD, staff psychologist for the Hope program at The
Menninger Clinic. “On average, most smokers make between
five and six attempts to quit before they are successful.”
An estimated 25 percent of
people in the United States smoke. About half of the 50
million smokers in the United States attempt to quit each
year, but only five to 10 percent still don’t smoke a year
later.
Dr. Daza studied smoking
cessation before coming to Menninger, and counsels patients
working on mental health issue who also want to quit.
Cigarette smoking is common among psychiatric patients. For
patients with schizophrenia, the rate of cigarette smoking
can be as high as 88 percent. The smoking zone is often the
busiest area in a psychiatric hospital.
“A key factor with
addiction to cigarettes is that not only is there a
physiological craving for the tobacco, but there is also a
psychological craving for social interaction and
camaraderie,” Dr. Daza says.
Dr. Daza recommends making
a plan for quitting smoking. She offers the following
suggestions for smokers who want to quit on their own:
· Set a date to quit smoking.
· Tell co-workers, family and friends about your quit date.
· Clean your house, car and any other place where you
typically smoke. Remove all ashtrays, deodorize your house
and car to remove the smell of smoke and remove any items
that might remind you of smoking.
· If you usually drink coffee while you smoke, switch to
orange juice or another beverage to break the link between
drinking a specific beverage and smoking.
· Recognize that the most intense withdrawal symptoms happen
in the first three weeks.
· Keep a list of reasons for quitting in places you
typically smoked.
Nicotine replacement aids
such as nicotine gum and the patch, help with withdrawal
symptoms and can be purchased over the counter. Smokers can
also ask their doctor to prescribe them the drug Buproprian
SR (Zyban). Zyban stimulates the release of a feel-good
chemical in the brain, called dopamine, to simulate the
effect of nicotine. Studies have shown that the use of the
drug doubles quit rates when compared with quitting cold
turkey.
Most relapses occur within
the first three months after a person stops smoking. One
third of relapses occur because of alcohol use, Dr. Daza
says. If you do relapse, treat it as a bump in the road
rather than proof that you can’t quit.
“Although this can be
difficult to hear, relapse is common to smoking cessation,”
Dr. Daza says. “The best course of action if you relapse is
to set a new quit date ASAP. More importantly, try to ask
yourself what might have led to the relapse. Were smokers
around you or were you drinking at the time? Quitting is a
process and most people make several quit attempts before
they are finally successful. Each quit attempt gets easier.”
The Menninger Clinic is an
international specialty psychiatric center, providing
innovative programs in treatment, research and education.
Founded in 1925 in Kansas, Menninger relocated to Houston in
2003 and is affiliated with Baylor College of Medicine and
The Methodist Hospital. For 14 consecutive years, Menninger
has been named among the leading psychiatric hospitals in
U.S. News & World Report’s annual ranking of America’s Best
Hospitals.