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Smoking
Cessation: Tips
to Help You Stop Smoking
Assessing
Your Habit
Health
Risks of Smoking
Cigars:
Coolish or Foolish?
Managing
Nicotine Withdrawal Symptoms
Secondhand
Smoke: Protect Yourself and Your Loved Ones
Snuffing
Our Smokeless Tobacco Use
UPMC
Patient Education Fact Sheets on Smoking
UPMC holds
smoking cessation classes throughout the year. To find one near
you, please visit www.upmc.com/Events.htm
or call 800-533-UPMC (8762).
Once you’ve
decided to quit smoking, set your “target quit date”
a few weeks away. In the time leading up to your quit day, try some
of these ideas offered by the Tobacco Control Research Branch of
the National Cancer Institute to help you successfully quit smoking.
Switch
Brands
- Switch to
a brand you find distasteful.
- Change to
a brand that is low in tar and nicotine a couple of weeks before
your target quit date. This will help change your smoking behavior.
However, do not smoke more cigarettes, inhale them more often
or more deeply, or place your fingertips over the holes in the
filters. All of these actions will increase your nicotine intake,
and the idea is to get your body used to functioning without nicotine.
Cut
Down the Number of Cigarettes You Smoke
- Smoke only
half of each cigarette.
- Each day,
postpone the lighting of your first cigarette by 1 hour.
- Decide you'll
only smoke during odd or even hours of the day.
- Decide beforehand
how many cigarettes you'll smoke during the day. For each additional
cigarette, give a dollar to your favorite charity.
- Change your
eating habits to help you cut down. For example, drink milk, which
many people consider incompatible with smoking. End meals or snacks
with something that won't lead to a cigarette.
- Reach for
a glass of juice instead of a cigarette for a "pick-me-up."
- Remember:
Cutting down can help you quit, but it's not a substitute for
quitting. If you're down to about 7 cigarettes a day, it's time
to set your target quit date and get ready to stick to it.
Don't
Smoke "Automatically"
- Smoke only
those cigarettes you really want. Catch yourself before you light
up a cigarette out of pure habit.
- Don't empty
your ashtrays. This will remind you of how many cigarettes you've
smoked each day, and the sight and the smell of stale cigarettes
butts will be very unpleasant.
- Make yourself
aware of each cigarette by using the opposite hand or putting
cigarettes in an unfamiliar location or a different pocket to
break the automatic reach.
- If you light
up many times during the day without even thinking about it, try
to look in a mirror each time you put a match to your cigarette–you
may decide you don't need it.
Make
Smoking Inconvenient
- Stop buying
cigarettes by the carton. Wait until one pack is empty before
you buy another.
- Stop carrying
cigarettes with you at home or at work. Make them difficult to
get to.
Make
Smoking Unpleasant
- Smoke only
under circumstances that aren't especially pleasurable for you.
If you like to smoke with others, smoke alone.
- Turn your
chair to an empty corner and focus only on the cigarette you are
smoking and all its many negative effects.
- Collect all
your cigarette butts in one large glass container as a visual
reminder of the filth made by smoking.
Just
Before Quitting
- Practice
going without cigarettes.
- Don't think
of never smoking again. Think of quitting in terms of 1 day at
a time.
- Tell yourself
you won't smoke today, and then don't.
- Clean your
clothes to rid them of the cigarette smell, which can linger a
long time.
On the
Day You Quit
- Throw away
all your cigarettes and matches. Hide your lighters and ashtrays.
- Visit the
dentist and have your teeth cleaned to get rid of tobacco stains.
Notice how nice they look and resolve to keep them that way.
- Make a list
of things you'd like to buy for yourself or someone else. Estimate
the cost in terms of packs of cigarettes, and put the money aside
to buy these presents.
- Keep very
busy on the big day. Go to the movies, exercise, take long walks,
go bike riding.
- Remind your
family and friends that this is your quit date, and ask them to
help you over the rough spots of the first couple of days and
weeks.
- Buy yourself
a treat or do something special to celebrate.
Immediately
After Quitting
- Develop
a clean, fresh, nonsmoking environment around yourself—at
work and at home. Buy yourself flowers—you may be surprised
how much you can enjoy their scent now.
- The first
few days after you quit, spend as much free time as possible in
places where smoking isn't allowed, such as libraries, museums,
theaters, department stores, and churches.
- Drink large
quantities of water and fruit juice (but avoid sodas that contain
caffeine).
- Try to avoid
alcohol, coffee, and other beverages that you associate with cigarette
smoking.
- Strike up
conversation instead of a match for a cigarette.
- If you miss
the sensation of having a cigarette in your hand, play with something
else—a pencil, a paper clip, a marble.
- If you miss
having something in your mouth, try toothpicks or a fake cigarette.
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