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Summary
What are the health risks of smoking tobacco?
Quitting smoking is important for your health. Besides being the leading cause of cancer in the United States, smoking tobacco harms most organs of your body and causes many other health problems.
Tobacco smoke contains many chemicals and can even be harmful even if you don't smoke. Exposure to secondhand smoke can increase the risk of cancer and other diseases. If you're pregnant, it can harm your fetus.
It can be difficult to quit smoking. That's because smoking also causes addiction to nicotine, a stimulant drug in tobacco. Nicotine addiction makes it harder to stop, but quitting smoking can improve the quality and length of your life.
What are the benefits of quitting smoking?
Tobacco use is the most common preventable cause of death. The more years you smoke and the more cigarettes you smoke each day, the higher your risk. Quitting smoking can help reduce your risk of health problems as well as improve the quality of your life.
Some initial benefits of quitting include:
- Lower heart rate and blood pressure
- Less carbon monoxide in the blood (carbon monoxide reduces the blood's ability to carry oxygen)
- Better circulation
- Less coughing and wheezing
- Sense of smell and taste return
In the long term, quitting tobacco can help you live a longer life. Your risk of getting cancer decreases with each year you stay smoke-free.
How can I quit smoking?
There are many ways to quit smoking. Common methods used to help quit smoking include:
- Counseling with a health care provider about your smoking habits, readiness to quit, and setting a quit date.
- Smoking aids such as nicotine replacement products or medicines to help reduce nicotine addiction. These may not be right for you if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, a teenager, or if you have certain medical issues or take certain medicines.
- Smoking reduction by slowly reducing the number of cigarettes per day, or stopping smoking altogether, often called "cold turkey."
You may need to try different things, but a mixture of counseling and quit-smoking medicine has been shown to be the best method.
Some people think that switching to e-cigarettes can help to quit smoking, but that has not been proven. These battery-operated smoking devices look like cigarettes but work differently. Using an e-cigarette is called vaping. Researchers still have a lot to learn about the health effects of using e-cigarettes.
When you stop or cut back on smoking, you may have short-term effects such as irritability, anxiety, moodiness, weight gain, or trouble sleeping. These are called withdrawal symptoms. You can work with your provider to help reduce these symptoms and find the best way for you to quit.
NIH: National Cancer Institute
Treatments and Therapies
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5 Things to Know about Complementary Health Approaches for Quitting Smoking
(National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health)
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Medications Can Help You Quit
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
- Want to Quit Smoking? FDA-Approved and FDA-Cleared Cessation Products Can Help (Food and Drug Administration) Also in Spanish
Living With
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Handling Nicotine Withdrawal and Triggers When You Decide To Quit Tobacco
(National Cancer Institute) Also in Spanish
- Help for Cravings and Tough Situations while You're Quitting Tobacco (American Cancer Society)
- How to Help Someone Quit Smoking (American Cancer Society)
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Manage Your Mood
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
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Managing Nicotine Withdrawal
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
Related Issues
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Fight Cravings with Exercise
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
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Weight Gain and Appetite
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
- What's in a Cigarette? (American Lung Association)
Specifics
- Smoking Cessation in Recovering Alcoholics (American Academy of Family Physicians) Also in Spanish
Health Check Tools
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Quiz: How Strong Is Your Nicotine Addiction?
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
Statistics and Research
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Complementary Health Approaches for Smoking Cessation: What the Science Says
(National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health)
- Smoking Cessation: Fast Facts (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
Clinical Trials
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ClinicalTrials.gov: Smoking Cessation
(National Institutes of Health)
Journal Articles References and abstracts from MEDLINE/PubMed (National Library of Medicine)
- Article: Usability and cultural adaptation of a text message-based tobacco cessation intervention...
- Article: What is the effect of presenting evidence of the mental vs...
- Article: Nicotine e-cigarettes for smoking cessation following discharge from smoke-free inpatient alcohol...
- Quitting Smoking -- see more articles
Find an Expert
- American Cancer Society
- American Lung Association
- Lung HelpLine (American Lung Association)
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National Cancer Institute
Also in Spanish
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National Institute on Drug Abuse
Also in Spanish
Teenagers
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How Can I Quit Smoking?
(Nemours Foundation) Also in Spanish
Women
- Health Effects of Cigarettes: Reproductive Health
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Quitting Smoking While Pregnant
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch)
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Smoking -- Medicines to Help You Quit
(Food and Drug Administration)
Patient Handouts
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Dispelling Myths about Nicotine Replacement Therapy
(National Cancer Institute, Tobacco Control Research Branch) - PDF
- Nicotine and tobacco (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
- Nicotine replacement therapy (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
- Smoking and surgery (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
- Smoking cessation medications (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
- Stop smoking support programs (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
- Weight gain after quitting smoking: What to do (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish