A National Directory of Drug Treatment Centers and Alcohol Treatment Centers, Therapists and Specialists. A free, simple directory providing assistance and guidance for those seeking help regarding alcohol addiction, drug addiction, dependency and many other conditions that affect the mind, body and soul.
Call 888-647-0579 to speak with an alcohol or drug abuse counselor.

Who Answers?

Nicotine Addiction: Prevalence And Treatment

A Seminar released on June 13, 2008 in The Lancet discusses nicotine addiction, and the potential for reducing its disease burden and death toll by improving public knowledge and using treatments individual to patients. This includes the potential creation of an antinicotine vaccine.

Nicotine is a stimulant classically found in tobacco, and its chronic addiction is primary cause of habitual smoking. According to the seminar, there are approximately 1.2 billion smokers and approximately half of them will die from diseases directly caused by smoking. Currently, about five million smokers die each year, and if present trends continue this could increase to ten million each year by 2025.

More of these smokers are men than women, necessitating separate studies by gender. For instance, of the world’s male population, 92% of them live in countries where more than 25% of all males smoke. In contrast, in the world’s female population, 10% live in countries where female smoking frequency is above 24%. In the United Kingdom and the United States, between 25-35% of all males smoke. In the female population, however, there is some discrepancy, as in the USA 14-24% of women smoke but more than 24% smoke in the UK.

The distribution of smokers varies by country, ranging from as little to 5% of the population to over 55%. Some countries where male smoking prevalence is above 55% include Russia and Kenya. The female smoking frequencies are above 24% in Brazil, Germany, Spain, and the UK.

Terminating an addiction to smoking is often recognized as a significant challenge. In the USA, over 70% of the smoking population want to quit every year and 45% attempt it. However, less than 5% of the general population is successful in this endeavor.

Even simple advice from a health care professional can help improve these rates. Following guidelines set forward recently in the US, the Seminar first examines the role of counseling in quitting smoking, addressing topics including problem solving, coping, and motivational skills.

According to the Seminar, this rate of termination can be enhanced by treatment for nicotine addiction itself. “Pharmacotherpaies for nicotine dependence can enhance quit rates by about
two-three fold,” state the authors. They discuss and evaluate a number of nicotine-replacement therapies (NRTs) such as patches or nicotine gum, non-nicotine products based on efficacy, side effects, and precautions for each. Additionally, they examine improved rates of success with combinations of the nicotine patch and other products such as nicotine gum.

The authors of the Seminar examine not just the characteristics of termination, but also the limited benefits of cigarette reduction, which is also achieved with higher frequency with the use of NRTs. They say, however, that these effects are counteracted by changes in the habits of the smokers: “Smokers engage in substantial compensatory smoking – deeper inhalation per cigarette – so that a reduction of cigarette consumption of 50% or more results only in a 30% decrease in biomarkers for toxicant exposure.” Cigarette reduction’s primary benefit, therefore, may be that it acts as an intermediate step towards quitting.

There are some new treatments in development. One example is a nicotine vaccine which prompts the body’s immune system to develop antibodies against the substance, and for which preliminary trials are in progress. Another is the drug rimonabant, which selectively blocks a specific cannabinoid receptor, for which large, randomized trials are being performed. Finally, pharmacogenetics, a field in which treatment is matched to the patient based on his genetic profile, is examined.

The authors conclude with comments about nicotine addiction: “Nicotine or tobacco addiction should be treated as a chronic disorder. Treatment can need persistent efforts to try to assist tobacco users in their attempts at quitting. Relapse should be seen as a probable event…Treatment can improve these outcomes…The most crucial component of care is the actual delivery of such treatments.”

Dr Kenneth Warner of School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI, USA, and Dr Judith Longstaff Mackay, Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, Hong Kong, China, contributed an accompanying Comment in which they state the importance of The Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC,) which has presently been ratified by 154 countries. They indicate that the medical community should make a higher priority of treatment of tobacco dependence, especially in every day practice, and that they should lobby governments, who may have conflicts of interest due to tobacco lobbies, to put this legislation into effect. “Here is something simple, achievable, and unequivocally good that would relieve the suffering of literally millions of human beings,” they say.
__________
source: Medical News Today

More Treatment & Detox Articles

What are the Best Alcohol Treatment Centers for Women?

More than 23.5 million people in the United States have had a problem with drugs or alcohol. Seven percent of those people are women. The United States has tens of thousands of facilities that are equipped to take care of the treatment needs of these women. When so many facilities are open and available to….

Continue reading

People drinking more ‘by stealth’

People are drinking more alcohol by “stealth” because of the stronger drinks on the market, an analysis of consumption in the UK suggests. The amount of alcohol consumed per person has risen by 10% since 2000 – despite drink sales remaining steady. Researchers Mintel said wines and lagers were becoming stronger and people were unaware….

Continue reading

Hunting ways to protect babies when mom drinks

Drinking alcohol during pregnancy

Drinking during pregnancy can seriously harm a baby’s brain, yet thousands of mothers-to-be still do. Now scientists have begun testing whether a prenatal nutrient might offer those babies a little protection, part of a growing quest for ways to reverse the damage. The only help today: intense behavioral or educational therapies once children with fetal….

Continue reading

The Holidays: Challenges and Survival Guide for Sober Alcoholics

Why are the holidays difficult for sober alcoholics? The holidays can be a triggering and challenging time for sober alcoholics, particularly for those in early sobriety. But why? There are a variety of reasons and this time of year can prove to be emotionally charged even for non-alcoholics. The holidays can be bittersweet, in that….

Continue reading

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in adults

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, largely affects the small children. In a global survey, it was found that the ADHD affects approximately 3 percent to 5 percent of all children. ADHD can be kept under control by proper treatment but only a few are aware that children suffering with ADHD are likely to carry the disorder….

Continue reading

Calls to the general helpline will be answered by a paid advertiser. By calling the helpline you agree to our terms of use.

I NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOWI NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOW 888-647-0579Response time about 1 min | Response rate 100%
Who Answers?