Don't let smoking myths stop you stubbing it out

Don't let modern myths put you off trying to kick the smoking habit urges a leading Spire Hospital consultant.
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Consultant respiratory physician, Dr Muhammed Raashed, said if your new year’s resolution was to stop smoking it might be proving to be a challenge as we progress through January.

It is tough at the best of times but as you try your hardest to stub out the habit the one thing you don’t want to hear is ‘it isn’t worth the effort’.

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Dr Raashed said die-hard smokers may well come up with a list of reasons they are ‘wasting their time’ trying to stop, but don’t listen to any of them – kicking the habit can only be good for your health.

Here Dr Raashed cuts through the myths and tells you the truth about giving up cigarettes: The myth: Stopping smoking makes you put on weight. The truth: Eating too much and not getting enough exercise makes you put on weight! I accept that some people do put on weight after stopping smoking but that is because they are using food as a substitute for cigarettes – when they feel they need a cigarette they are eating a biscuit or a chocolate bar instead.

The myth: If you have been smoking for more than five years the damage is already done. The truth: The sooner you stop the better but no matter how long you have smoked stopping will give your heart and lungs a chance to recover. If you have been smoking for around five years, stopping will half your risk of heart attack. After 15 years the risk of heart attack is almost the same as someone who has never smoked at all.

The myth: I’ll switch to ‘lights’ and stop later. The truth: The chances are that you won’t! Whatever the manufacturers try to tell you a light cigarette contains about the same amount of tar as a regular cigarette - in fact ‘light’ actually refers to the ‘taste and flavour’ of the tobacco and not its tar content.

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The myth: It helps me manage my stress levels. The truth: Nicotine alters the balance of two chemicals in the brain: dopamine and noradrenaline. When these levels are altered by nicotine, patients feel stress relief and feelings of enjoyment. The act of inhalation means the active chemicals get to the brain more quickly, and effect a near immediate change in mood.

The myth: Nicotine replacement products are as addictive as smoking. The truth: Most people using nicotine products do not become dependent on them. The nicotine from patches, gum and so on is released into your system much more slowly and in a different way than nicotine from a cigarette.

Your body absorbs it more slowly and less reaches your brain, making it easier to stop using it at the end of your course.

QUITTING SMOKING MYTHS

1. Stopping smoking makes you gain weight; TRUTH: Eating too much and not exercising makes you gain weight

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2. Smoking for more than five years the damage is done; TRUTH: The sooner you stop the better, but whenever you stop your heart and lungs will recover.

3. It helps to manage my stress levels; TRUTH: Nicotine alters the balance of two chemicals in the brain: dopamine and noradrenaline. Nicotine can exacerbate stress