Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Great Resource on the Facts About Ovarian Cancer
Smoking Cessation
Within 20 minutes - your heart rate calms down
Within 8 hours - there is more oxygen in your blood and mucous begins to clear out of your lungs, which makes breathing easier
Within 48 hours - things smell and taste better
Within 3 months - your blood circulation improves and your body is better able to fight infection
Within 9 months - less sinus congestion, wheezing, and shortness of breath
Within 1 year - your risk of dying from a heart attack is cut in half
After 5 years - you have much less of a chance of having a stroke
After ten years - your risk of developing lung cancer is cut in half
Moreover, the mathematics of quitting are clear: 365 days/year x $5.00/pack = $1825.00 for a pack per day smoker for a year 365 days/year x $10.00/pack = $3650.00 for a two pack per day smoker for a year 10 years = $18,250.00 for a pack per day smoker or $36,500.00 for a 2 pack per day smoker It is especially important that cancer patients and survivors quit smoking. A recent meta-analysis showed that 14-58% of cancer patients who were smoking at the time of diagnosis continued smoking after treatment. This is alarming because quitting smoking after initial diagnosis can:
Positively impact response to treatments (therapeutic radiology, chemotherapy, and surgery)
Decrease the likelihood that patients will develop second malignancies
Increase rates of survival
Importantly, there are several effective smoking cessation treatments. First line drug therapies include: nicotine replacement therapy (patch, gum, lozenge, nasal spray, and inhaler), bupropion SR (Wellbutrin XL, Zyban), and varenicline (Chantix). Of note, there is recent convincing research that dual nicotine replacement therapy (e.g., patch + lozenge) is a very safe and effective treatment regimen. It is essential that drug therapies be combined with counseling. There is a dose response curve for the amount of counseling time and the number of counseling sessions, such that a higher amount of contact time and a higher number of sessions are related to higher rates of abstinence from smoking. There is a new Smoking Cessation Service at Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale-New Haven. This service provides individual counseling combined with a first line medication treatment. All care is highly personalized and tailored to the needs of the patient. After a thorough assessment, patients are typically followed for 4 to 9 individual sessions with multiple follow-up phone calls. Every effort is made to schedule smoking cessation treatment sessions so that they coincide with pre-existing cancer treatment appointments. Please feel free to contact the Smoking Cessation Service