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With current medical press taking such an intense focus on the dangers of smoking, smoking cessation has become one of the widest and most lucrative pharmaceutical markets in the industry as consumers look for new and better ways to stop the habit. The most advanced method right now is nicotine replacement therapy, products for which can be found at drug stores, grocers, and virtually anywhere over the counter medicine is found. However, there are many methods of nicotine delivery, some of which are met with higher ratios of success than others, depending largely upon the specifics of the individual's physiological and psychological addiction.
Nicotine replacement is, as well, not the only method of treatment. Various non-nicotine pharmaceuticals join the market of existing traditional and herbal remedies, in addition to numerous self-made methods, most of which involve releasing nervous tension on a toothpick, straw or chewing gum.
Studies seem to indicate that nicotine replacement therapy is the best way to drop tobacco, but because nicotine is the addictive ingredient in tobacco, users often find themselves addicted in turn to their treatments, and unable or unwilling to lessen the dosage until the treatment is no longer necessary. Regardless, the health risks of nicotine itself and the cost of nicotine replacement therapy aside, one does by this route circumvent inhalation and absorption of the other deadly ingredients associated with the inhalation of burning tobacco, and so it is a fully viable, widely-used method very often recommended by personal physicians.
Types of nicotine replacement therapy include the patch, by which nicotine is introduced topically through the skin. Usually patches are worn for a day or longer, delivering a constant stream of treatment throughout the hours of the day. This has the advantage of removing the psychological association formed between nicotine absorption and the process by which it is taken, because it's not delivered in a single rush. This psychological association is the formula for addiction, because it causes a person to repeat the process that brings on the rush of addictive substance, and to associate automatic pleasure with that process.
Alternatively, nicotine gum is widely used. This, too, is addictive, somewhat more than the patch, in fact, as it does promote nicotine association directly with the process of chewing gum and with the flavor of the gum. Also, it allows you to control your own dosage, as you can chew more or less gum depending upon your cravings. This can be beneficial in quitting smoking, but it can make it much harder to kick the gum habit once the cigarettes are out of the picture.
Nicotine inhalers are also sold, and have largely the same faults and advantages of the gum, save that their intake method is superficially similar to that of cigarettes. Nicotine inhalers are usually a bit thicker than a cigarette, and fit between two fingers, allowing one to vaguely simulate the sensation of inhaling nicotine in the form of smoke. However, a common complaint is that this does little to satisfy a long-time smoker, because inhaling the nicotine doesn't feel much like inhaling tobacco smoke, which is thick enough to have a noticeable presence in the lungs. This does, some say, defeat the purpose of the illusion entirely. Additionally, it reinforces the physical habit of smoking, if not the actual smoking of cigarettes.
A non-nicotine based alternative some choose is the adoption of herbal cigarettes, which contain no tobacco or nicotine, but which still have the health risks of smoking burning vegetable matter, such as carbon monoxide inhalation and the inhalation of 'tar'. This can help to clear the psychological association of smoking as being pleasant for its nicotine, however, and can in that way help to resolve addiction for some individuals.
Other methods exist, including many pharmaceuticals and herbals that purport to help relieve the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal and to reduce cravings. Consult with a doctor and/or herbal health professional before adopting any such treatments, so you can be sure that they are right for you. |
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