New
guidance suggests that smokers should be able to use nicotine replacement
products to help them kick the habit gradually.
Nicotine
patches and gum should be prescribed to smokers to try and help them quit, the
health watchdog has said. Previously, smokers could be prescribed nicotine
replacement products if they were to go "cold turkey". But new
guidance from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice)
suggests that smokers should be able to use the products to help them kick the habit
gradually. Patches, gum and other licensed products should be used to replace
nicotine normally provided by smoking cigarettes, the draft guidance says.
Nice
has provisionally recommended the use of nicotine-containing products to
support smokers who want to cut down gradually before quitting, those who want
to smoke less and those who want to stop smoking for a specific period of time,
such as during the working day. Healthcare professionals should also advise
smokers that some nicotine-containing products - such as e-cigarettes - are not
currently regulated by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
and so their safety and quality cannot be guaranteed. But smokers should be
told these products are likely to be less harmful than cigarettes, Nice said. The
guidance also suggests tobacco retailers should display licensed
nicotine-containing products in shops and supermarkets.
Professor
Mike Kelly, director of the Nice Centre for Public Health Excellence, said:
"Smoking tobacco is responsible for over 79,000 deaths in England each
year and children's vulnerability to second-hand smoke is well documented. If
you are a smoker, quitting smoking is the best way to improve health, and
quitting in one step is most likely to be successful."
Professor
John Britton, chair of the Royal College of Physicians' tobacco advisory group,
said: "Smokers smoke for nicotine, and since tobacco smoke is by far the
most harmful available source of nicotine, switching to alternatives as a short
- or long-term substitute is the obvious healthier choice. We would encourage
all smokers to take up the opportunities presented by this guidance, and if
they can't quit using nicotine altogether, to switch as much as they can to an
alternative nicotine product."
A
Department of Health spokesman said: "We know that the majority of smokers
want to stop, and free local NHS stop smoking services can help them stop for
good, particularly as they combine drug replacements such as NRT with
counselling. All treatments are provided according to what is best for the
client. We will continue to work with Nice and others to make sure our stop
smoking programmes are effective and value for money."
msn.com
No comments:
Post a Comment