A Kick-Butt Butt-Kicking Plan
Here’s a tool you should absolutely use when you’re trying to ditch a nicotine habit: your phone.
But don’t call just anyone. Call a quit line — a free phone line dedicated to helping counsel people who are trying to quit. It could double your chances of success.
Frequent Callers
Intensive telephone counseling (multiple sessions and follow-up calls work best) coupled with free medication (many quit lines help you find complimentary nicotine patches or other meds) doubled the quit rate of smokers in a recent study. So don’t go it alone or do it cold turkey. Every state has quit-smoking hotlines. Here’s what else helps:
Set a quit date.
Call or e-mail a support person daily to discuss your progress.
Walk 30 minutes a day. (It will help you feel better.
Talk to your doctor about patches or pills that can help.
A Michigan State University physician has highlighted the adverse health effects of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) as well as a number of issues regarding safety in the workplace in his report, following the death of a young asthmatic woman shortly after she arrived at a bar to work as a waitress.
The report states that the woman seemed happy and healthy when she arrived at the bar in Michigan, according to her co-workers. About 15 or 20 minutes later she collapsed, and within a few minutes died, the report adds.
“This is the first reported acute asthma death associated with work-related ETS. Recent studies of air quality and asthma among bar and restaurant workers before and after smoking bans support this association,� said Kenneth Rosenman, a professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
For more ways to quit smoking, feel free to browse Encouraging Health
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