Publication | Open Access
Comparison of four methods of smoking withdrawal in patients with smoking related diseases. Report by a subcommittee of the Research Committee of the British Thoracic Society.
131
Citations
15
References
1983
Year
Tobacco CessationRelapse PreventionRelated DiseasesTobacco ControlNicotineAddiction MedicinePharmacologic InterventionPublic HealthResearch CommitteeSmoking Related Lung DiseaseHealth PolicyTobacco UseOutcomes ResearchVerbal AdviceYear 150Smoking CessationNursingSubstance AbuseBritish Thoracic SocietyAddictionMedicineAnesthesiology
Four methods of smoking withdrawal were compared in patients with smoking related diseases attending a hospital or chest clinic. Reinforcing verbal advice with a booklet or with a booklet together with nicotine or placebo chewing gum did not result in greater success than verbal advice alone. Roughly a quarter of those patients who denied smoking had carboxyhaemoglobin and plasma thiocyanate concentrations typical of smokers. At the end of a year 150 out of 1550 patients (9.7%) had successfully stopped smoking.
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