Methods of Smoking Cessation


Methods of quitting

Cold Turkey method
Nicotine Replacement Methods (Patch, Gum, Nasal Spray)
Behavioral Methods
Cognitive Therapy Method
Other Methods and adjuncts (acupuncture, hypnosis, medications)
Factors for relapse while in the process of quitting
Predictors of successful quitting

Cold turkey method

This is the prefered method used by so called self changers, people who quit on their own and without any nicotine replacement by gum, patch or nasal spray. Little is known about this method as any research study would influence the results as it would no longer be a spontaneous process. Strong motivational factors are believed to play the foremost role in successful quitting using this method.

Nicotine replacement therapy

In this method the nicotine delivered by the cigarette is replaced with nicotine delivered through the skin (transdermal nicotine or nicotine patch) , the nasal mucosa (nicotine nasal spray) or the buccal mucosa (nicotine chewing gum). Several well designed clinical trials have shown the efficacy and safety of nicotine replacement the goal of which is to reduce cravings and ease withdrawal symptoms.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ?

Behavioral therapy strategies for smoking cessation


Maintenance sessions months later can help consolidate the new habits....whatever worked for you, do them some more from time to time to avoid relapses...



Cognitive therapy techniques

Uses the concept of taking personal responsibility for one's thoughts, helping change the way a person thinks, changing the beliefs about the barriers to success, and identifying irrational thought patterns and mindsets are focused on in this strategy.

Cognitions ( thought patterns ) can be re-engineered and reconstructed...first one has to carefully analyze current beliefs, thought patterns then look at the feelings and behaviors that accompany those thoughts... the second step is replace the thought by another, drawing on examples from your own life experience preferably.

For example someone who says I always fail... if challenged about the word always will undoubtably have at least one success story in their life somewhere ....thus the thought can be replaced by I sometimes fail or better yet, I have had plenty of successes in my life!!

Homework assignments:

Self rating of control, mastery and pleasure

Using a 1-10 scale ... write down a number from 1 to 10 reflecting how much in control you feel, how much mastery or how much pleasure you are experiencing....

this can help you focus your thoughts on these themes, and you can identify times of greater and lesser vulnerability which can be invaluable information ....chart this stuff daily or weekly starting prior to your quit date until several weeks after quitting.

Cognitive rehearsal

...i.e. practicing dealing with high risk realpse situations. For example you could rehearse what you will say when offered a cigarette at a social gathering...
"no thanks I am a non smoker!!"

Common beliefs and barriers:

"I'll get fat . . . " A study of 20,000 quitters showed that 80% do gain weight versus 56% of continuing smokers. The average gain was only 4.6 Lbs. 20% will gain 10 lbs. And 4% will gain 20+ lbs. With care to watch diet and exercise, weight gain can be controlled.

"I have to die of something . . . " no one deserves a premature death, smokers are 1 1/2 times more likely to die in the next year as an ex-smoker of the same age and sex.

"I can't enjoy life without smoking"...fewer coughs, less shortness of breath, stronger immune function, longer life . . . won't that help you enjoy your life more?

"I'll cut down"... if you can do it, it will help but why have your risk be any higher than it needs to be?

"Not all smokers die young"...true enough, there are some lucky individuals, and its up to you to choose to have the odds stacked in your favor or to have them against you.

"I've failed in the past . . . " most long term abstainers fail 4 to 5 times before succeeding.

"Its too late, I'm already sick . . . " there are benefits in stopping at all ages. After a heart attack, continuing smokers have a 10-fold greater mortality than do ex-smokers.

" I'll quit later if I get symptoms"...the risk is cumulative and it takes years for it to develop and to decrease after cessation.

"I'm only hurting myself"...WRONG!!! Passive smoking harms those exposed to it and costs them their health and well-being.

Common cognitive distortions of addicted individuals...in this text alcohol is the object of discussion...the reader is invited to substitue the word tobacco or nicotine whenever alcohol is mentioned....



Other methods and adjuncts

 
Mecamylamine combined with nicotine skin patch facilitates smoking cessation beyond nicotine patch treatment alone. Rose JE, Behm FM, Westman EC, Levin ED, Stein RM, Ripka GV.; Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics 1994;56:86-99
Nicotine/mecamylamine combination treatment for smoking cessation Jed E. Rose, Eric C. Westman1,Frederique M. Behm; Drug Dev.Res. 38:243-256 ;1996 Mecamylamine (a nicotine antagonist) for smoking cessation Lancaster T, Stead LF. (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 1, 1999. Oxford: Update Software.


Factors that influence relapse rates

Knowledge of these can help you come up with a relapse prevention program...planning ahead and giving some thought on how to deal with these situations and lessos learned from the past can help you negotiate these difficult passages on your path to success!!!

Predictors of successful quitting


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last modified April 18, 2006
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