You can – and should – quit smoking
If you smoke and are part of the nearly 70 percent of smokers who want to quit smoking, there are a number of smoking cessation
techniques you can use to kick the habit.
Experts recommend counseling, nicotine replacement
therapy and alternative therapies, such as acupuncture, as well as perseverance. For sure, the decision to quit smoking
is daunting but it will improve your health
, improve the quality of your life and perhaps even prevent your kids from picking up a smoke. Need more motivation? Here
are 10 reasons to quit smoking for the New Year and beyond.
Quit smoking reason #1: Reduce your risk of lung cancer
Lung cancer
accounts for 26 percent of cancer deaths among women reports the Lung Cancer Alliance. Just 50 years ago, lung cancer accounted
for only three percent. Though smoking is not the only cause of lung cancer, it can greatly increase your risk of developing
this deadly disease. According to the American Lung Association, smoking is directly responsible for 87 percent of reported
lung cancer cases.
Quit smoking reason #2: Protect yourself from HPV
In the book The HPV Vaccine Controversy, author Dr Shobha S Krishnan warns that smoking can
make existing HPV infections persist in the body and even cause HPV-related diseases because smoking weakens the immune system.
Quit smoking reason #3: Save your eyesight
Dr Edward Paul, one of the world’s leading authorities on macular degeneration, says smoking increases a patient’s risk of developing
age-related macular degeneration – a leading cause of blindness in Americans 65 years old and older – by a whopping
350 percent.
Quit smoking reason #4: Your heart-health
Smoking increases your risk of developing heart disease
and stroke - among other diseases – and the more cigarettes you smoke, the higher your risk. Even reducing the
number of cigarettes you smoke per day can help protect your heart. A study in Nicotine & Tobacco
Research reports that fewer cigarettes can decrease “bad” cholesterol, increase “good” cholesterol,
and improve the blood’s ability to transport oxygen – meaning you will feel less winded during exertion. Kicking
the habit for good delivers even more heart-health benefits.
Quit smoking reason #5: Keep your teeth
A study in BMC Public Health earlier this year indicates that current smokers are significantly
more likely to lose their teeth than former smokers or nonsmokers aged 20 to 38 years old. That’s too young to be losing
teeth! Additionally, the nicotine in cigarettes stain teeth, meaning the teeth you don’t lose will stay a dingy shade
of yellow.
Quit smoking reason #6: Live longer
Don’t you have family and friends you enjoy spending time with? What about your kids – don’t you want
to see them grow up, get married and have kids of their own? Quitting smoking will lengthen your life – as well as improve
its quality – and the healthy results of kicking the habit are realized rather quickly. A May 2008 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association reports that 61 percent of the full benefit of quitting in
regard to coronary heart disease mortality and 42 percent of the full benefit of quitting in regard to cerebrovascular deaths
was realized within the first five years.
Quit smoking reason #7: Improve your fertility
Having trouble conceiving? In the article Smoking adds a decade to your fertility age, experts say smoking could be hurting your chances. However, lead researcher Dr Bea Lintsen, from Radboud University Nijmegen
Medical Centre, says: "The positive news from our results is that they suggest that couples – in particular, women with
unexplained subfertility – may be able to improve the success of IVF treatment by quitting smoking."
Quit smoking reason #8: Stay beautiful
According to Kori Ellis, author of 8 Healthy skincare tips, studies show that the skin of cigarette smokers ages more than twice as fast as that of non-smokers. Smoking dehydrates
your skin and depletes it of essential nutrients. She suggests that you detoxify your skin by quitting smoking and/or limiting
your exposure to second hand smoke and other pollutants.
Quit smoking reason #9: Better your digestive health
Believe it or not, smoking can contribute to digestive diseases. The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases warns that smoking can effect all parts of the digestive system, contributing to such common disorders as heartburn
and peptic ulcers as well as increasing the risk of Crohn's disease, and possibly gallstones, which form when liquid stored
in the gallbladder hardens into pieces of stone-like material. Smoking can even damage your liver.
Quit smoking reason #10: Be a good role model
Even though packs of smokes say smoking is hazardous to your health, your kids are going to look to you for guidance. If
you smoke, chances are great they will, too. If you don’t, you improve the chances they won’t, either. If you
quit, you are showing them that smoking is a poor choice for long-term health and, as importantly, you are showing them that
you care enough about them as well as yourself to live to see them grow up and have kids of their own.