In regular or heavy smokers, stopping smoking can produce almost immediate beneficial effects. The benefits derived from long-term cessation, however, have the greatest positive impact on health. Look at a few of the benefits from stopping smoking reported by the Centers for Disease Control and the U.S. Surgeon General:
- Within twenty minutes of quitting, your heart rate and blood pressure drop to a more normal level.
- Twelve hours after quitting, carbon monoxide and nicotine related to smoking is eliminated from the body.
- A few months after quitting, the senses of taste and smell improve and breathing comes more easily with less coughing.
- By one year of quitting, the additional risk imposed by cigarette smoking on the development of heart disease is cut in half.
- Five years after quitting the risk of stroke risk reverts to that of a person who had never smoked. The risk of developing cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, and bladder is cut in half.
- Ten years after quitting the risk of dying from lung cancer is about half that of a person who is still smoking.
- Fifteen years after quitting the risk of coronary heart disease is that of a non-smoker.
Along with the health benefits, wouldn’t it be nice not to worry about where and when you can light up legally or if you are offending someone? Wouldn’t it be nice to have the money spent on cigarettes to use for something else?
Those are a few of the personal reasons for quitting. But what about the impact of smoking on others? It is now well known that even a little second-hand smoke is dangerous. Second-hand smoke is linked to the development of certain cancers, breathing problems, and heart disease in non-smokers. People who breathe second-hand smoke get colds and flu more easily. Children who breathe second-hand smoke are much more likely to develop asthma and are more likely to have ear and lung infections, including pneumonia. It is now recognized that pregnant women who smoke or breathe second-hand smoke are more likely to have stillbirths, low birth weight babies, and babies who die of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
If that’s not enough rationale to convince you to quit smoking, consider that there are more than 7,000 chemicals in cigarette smoke. Some of these chemicals are also found in paint thinners (toluene), embalming fluid (formaldehyde), and chemical weapons (hydrogen cyanide).
Set a quit date and choose a quit plan. Many tobacco users choose the day known as the Great American Smokeout to quit smoking. This year, the American Cancer Society has designated it to be November 20. Click on this link to the American Cancer Society for tips and tools to help you quit or contact us at eDocAmerica for more suggestions.
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