smoking
Support for you or someone you care about
Stopping smoking is one of the best things you will ever do for your health. With the right help and support, it’s possible to quit smoking and stay that way.
Quitting smoking can be hard, but the right help, support and advice makes it easier. In this section you will find some top tips to help you quit smoking
Tips to help you quit smoking
What happens to your body when you quit smoking
Quitting smoking has many benefits to your body and the good news is that some of these changes will happen almost straight away! Look at what happens when you quit for good:
Other benefits of quitting
As well as the benefits to your physical health, there are some other benefits to quitting smoking. These include that:
How is smoking linked to stress?
You might feel that smoking helps you to manage stress – but it actually increases anxiety and tension. Nicotine creates an immediate sense of relaxation, so people smoke in the belief that it reduces stress and anxiety. This feeling is temporary and soon gives way to withdrawal symptoms which contribute towards stress and anxiety.
Stopping smoking aids, like nicotine replacement therapy or e-cigarettes can help you to manage the experience of withdrawal, but it’s also really important to develop alternative coping mechanisms to managing stress. To find out more about ways to manage your stress, you may want to visit the Wellness Hive.
Why is it important to quit smoking in pregnancy?
Protecting your baby from tobacco smoke is one of the best things you can do to give your child a healthy start in life. When you stop smoking:
The sooner you stop smoking, the better. But even if you stop in the last few weeks of your pregnancy, this will benefit you and your baby.
If your partner or anyone else who lives with you smokes, their smoke can also affect you and your baby before and after their birth. Second-hand smoke can reduce your baby’s birthweight and increase the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Babies whose parents smoke are more likely to be admitted to hospital for bronchitis and pneumonia during their first year.
Speak to a midwife for support to quit smoking in pregnancy:
Speak to a stop smoking advisor about your partner quitting smoking:
Is vaping better or worse than smoking?
Experts agree that vaping is much less harmful than smoking, but it is not risk-free.
Cigarettes release thousands of different chemicals when they burn. Many are poisonous and up to 70 cause cancer. Toxins in tobacco smoke can also cause other serious illnesses, including lung disease, heart disease and stroke.
In contrast, vaping exposes you to far fewer toxins than cigarette smoking, and vapes do not produce tar or carbon monoxide, which are two of the most harmful substances in tobacco smoke.
However, vaping is not harmless. Short-term effects can include:
Vaping has not been around for long enough to know the risks of long-term use. This includes the long-term effects of inhaling the flavourings in vapour. While vaping is much less harmful than smoking, it is unlikely to be totally harmless.
The healthiest option is not to smoke or vape, so if you do not smoke, you should not start vaping.
Can vaping help me quit smoking?
Vaping can be used to help you quit smoking, as vapes usually include nicotine. Nicotine itself is not very harmful and has been used safely for many years in medicines to help people stop smoking. Vaping can help you to manage nicotine withdrawal symptoms whilst you’re quitting, whilst decreasing the number of toxins you are exposed to.
The routines and rituals of smoking can also be hard to stop, so vaping can be used as a tool when you’re quitting to help you gradually let go of these while immediately reducing the health risks of smoking cigarettes. Evidence shows that you’re roughly twice as likely to quit smoking if you use a vape compared with other nicotine replacement products, like patches and gum.
Should I quit vaping?
Once you have been vaping for a while and feel sure you will not go back to smoking, it is recommended that you aim to eventually quit vaping too.
Many vapers find they get to this stage after about 12 months, but everyone is different. Do not rush this step. Only reduce your vaping frequency or nicotine strength when you feel you will not go back to smoking and do not have to puff more to compensate. Remember that smoking is more harmful than vaping.
There are a couple of ways to try to quit vaping:
Are vapes safe to use in pregnancy?
There is little research on the safety of vaping in pregnancy, but it’s likely to be much less harmful for you and your baby than smoking.
If you’re pregnant and need support to quit smoking, licensed nicotine replacement therapy products like patches and gum are the recommended option.
But if you find vaping helpful to quit and to stay smoke-free, it is much safer for you and your baby than continuing to smoke. The most important thing is to not smoke when pregnant or around pregnant women.
Speak to a midwife for support to quit smoking in pregnancy:
Did you know that you’re up to 3 times more likely to stop smoking for good if you use a combination of stop smoking treatment and receive support from a stop smoking service?
I would like to receive support from a stop smoking service
You can register with Get Healthy Rotherham using the button below or by calling 01709 718720 to access free support and advice to help you quit smoking.
Get Healthy Coaches will meet with you every week for up to three months and provide you with all the support, motivation, and expert guidance that you need to stop smoking for good. You can access this support online, in person or over the phone to suit you.
The Get Healthy Coaches will also be able to advise you on and supply a range of stop smoking aids such as a nicotine replacement therapy. All of the support provided is free, including access to nicotine replacement therapy which will be posted directly to you.
Smoking in Pregnancy team
If you are pregnant, specialist support is available through Rotherham Hospital’s Smoking in Pregnancy team. This includes:
Further information is available on the Rotherham NHS Foundation Trust website.
You can make an appointment by calling 01709 423729.
National Smokefree Helpline
If you want to talk to someone about quitting smoking, you can call the free National Smokefree Helpline on 0300 123 1044. You will be able to to talk with a trained adviser for advice and support.
I would like to know more about stop smoking aids
Stop smoking aids help you manage nicotine cravings and other tobacco withdrawal symptoms. There are many different options.
Nicotine replacement therapies (NRTs), such as patches, sprays, gum and lozenges
NRTs give you nicotine (the addictive substance in cigarettes and tobacco) without any of the harmful chemicals. They can help reduce the withdrawal symptoms of quitting. Also, NRTs have been widely used for many years as a safe treatment to help with quitting. They can be bought from pharmacies, supermarkets and some other shops. They may also be prescribed by a doctor or a stop smoking service.
Nicotine vapes (e-cigarettes)
Vapes are electronic devices that let you inhale nicotine in a vapour instead of smoke. This is done by heating a solution (e-liquid), which comes in different nicotine strengths and flavours.
Vapes come in a variety of models. They can be bought from specialist vape shops, some pharmacies, supermarkets and other shops. Unlike NRTs, they are not available on prescription from a doctor or other healthcare professional.
Research shows that nicotine vapes are an effective tool for quitting smoking. People who use a vape daily together with support from a stop smoking service have the most success at quitting.
Experts agree that although vapes are not risk-free, they carry a small fraction of the risks of cigarettes.
Nicotine pouches
Tobacco-free nicotine pouches are fairly new in the UK and currently are not recommended as a stop smoking aid, due to a lack of research on how safe or effective they are for stopping smoking.
Nicotine pouches are placed between the lip and gum and come in different nicotine strengths and flavours.
Prescription-only medicines
There are two prescription-only stop smoking medicines, which are in tablet form:
• varenicline (brand name Champix)
• bupropion (brand name Zyban)
These medicines do not contain nicotine, but they can help with withdrawal symptoms.
If recommended by a doctor or a stop smoking adviser, they can be taken together with nicotine replacement products.
Both varenicline and bupropion are currently not available in the UK due to supply issues.
Speak to a doctor or stop smoking adviser about availability or an alternative treatment.
I would like to sign up for daily email support
You’re more likely to stop smoking with the right support, so sign up for daily email support.
If you are worried about someone you know, in this section you will find some top tips to help them quit smoking.
Top tips to help someone you care about
I am concerned about a young person vaping
Smoking is much more harmful than vaping, but it is not risk-free. The healthiest option is not to smoke or vape, so if you do not smoke, you should not start vaping.
It’s important to listen to children and young people when talking about vaping, but also to ensure that they are aware of the risks. Tips on how to talk to your child about vaping are included below:
Downloadable Posters and Leaflet
I want to report the illegal selling of tobacco and vapes
In England tobacco products are regulated, which means that all products must be labelled, packaged, and have contents that are consistent with the criteria outlined in the law. Tobacco products that do not meet this criterion are unregulated products and selling these is a crime. Unregulated products present a serious risk to those who smoke them, as their contents are unknown. The reduced price of illegal tobacco may also attract younger smokers who would not usually be able to afford to buy cigarettes.
It is illegal to sell tobacco products (both regulated and unregulated) to anyone under 18 or for adults to buy them for children.
Illicit trade is not just a health issue, it is also tax fraud which reduces money for public services, and also fuels local and national criminality and gangs, including child exploitation.
If you need to report illicit, unregulated tobacco or vape products, or shops selling products to children under 18 years, please contact Trading Standards
Top tips
List your reasons to quit. What motivates people is different for everyone, but there is some more information below about the many benefits of quitting.
Tell people that you’re quitting and ask for the support of your friends and family. If you live with someone else who smokes, it will be much easier to quit if they quit with you.
Set a date. Any day will do, but the act of choosing a date will help you to focus and plan.
Remember that quitting can take you more than one go – and that’s ok! If you have tried to quit before, remember what helped you and think about your triggers and how best to avoid them.
Consider using stop smoking aids or getting support from a stop smoking service. Did you know that you’re up to 3 times more likely to stop smoking for good if you use a combination of stop smoking treatment and receive support from a stop smoking service?
Have a plan of what you will do if you are tempted to smoke. Prepare some alternative strategies for coping with stress if your usual coping mechanism is to have a cigarette.
Keep cravings at bay by keeping busy.
Exercise away the urge.
Make time to take breaks and go outside.
In the first few days, consider changing up your routine to avoid situations where you might usually smoke.
Avoid substances that you associate with smoking within the first few weeks, for example, alcoholic drinks.
Join the Better Health Quit Smoking Support Group on Facebook for support and advice.
If you end up relapsing, don’t consider it a failure. Every time you try to quit, you increase your chance of quitting for good.
Better Health
National information and advice on quitting smoking.
National Smokefree Helpline
Free helpline with trained advisors who can provide help and support.
Telephone: 0300 123 1044
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