Smoking: Risks – Benefits Of Stopping

Smoking has many health risks and absolutely no health benefits. Why do people keep smoking? Because it has become a habit and they are hooked on nicotine.

Smoking causes premature skin wrinkles, bad breath, clothes that smell of smoke, yellow hair and yellow fingernails. Smoking makes a smoker at increased risk for macular degeneration, a common cause of blindness for the elderly.

Women’s health risks are many. If a woman is over 35 and using birth control and smokes more than 10 cigarettes a day, she is in a higher risk group for heart attacks, strokes and blood clots in the legs. Miscarriages and lower birth-weight for babies are common problems for female smokers.

The US Center for Disease Control estimates that women who smoke lose 14.5 years of life on average and men lose 13.2 years of life. If you quit smoking before you are 50, the risk of dying by 65 is sliced in half, compared with smokers who don’t quit. Ex-smokers will live longer and have a higher quality of life, fewer sicknesses such as cold and flu viruses and lesser rates of pneumonia and bronchitis.

The US Surgeon General has stated:

“Quitting smoking has major and immediate health benefits for men and women of all ages. Benefits apply to people with and without smoking-related disease.

Former smokers live longer than continuing smokers.

Quitting smoking decreases the risk of lung cancer, other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease.

Women who stop smoking before pregnancy or during the first 3 to 4 months of pregnancy reduce their risk of having a low birth weight baby to that of women who never smoked.

The health benefits of quitting smoking far exceed any risks from the less than 10 pound weight gain or any adverse psychological effects that may follow quitting.”

There are many benefits to quitting smoking:

Heart rate and blood pressure drop after 20 minutes of not smoking.

Carbon monoxide levels in the blood normalize after 12 hours of not smoking.

Circulation improves and lung function expands from 2 weeks-3 months after not smoking.

Coughing, shortness of breath and cilia regain normal lung functions (cleaning the lungs, handle mucus effectively, reduce infection) 1 to 9 months after not smoking.

Higher risk of coronary heart disease from smoking reduces after 1 year to normal.

Higher risk of stroke as a result of smoking is normalized to a nonsmoker’s 5-15 years after not smoking.

The lung cancer death rate is halved in 10 years, compared with a continuing smoker. Mouth, throat, esophagus, cervix, bladder and pancreas cancer risks decrease.

Coronary heart disease is at the level of a nonsmokers after 15 years of quitting smoking.

FAST HEALTH BENEFITS FOR QUITTING

You can taste your food better.

The sense of smell is normalized.

Cleaning, climbing up stairs and normal activity do not result in breathlessness.

Financial Cost of Smoking

The health costs of smoking are plentiful and many. That is plain and can be accounted for. So can your monetary cost of cigarettes. How much do you spend on ciggies?? One pack a day x 365 days @ $5/pack (modest price in some areas, expensive in others but you get the idea) equals $1,825 in a year multiplied by however many years you smoke ($18,250 for ten years, $27,375 for fifteen years, $36,500 for twenty years!)

How would you rather spend the money?

Eric Hartwell
http://www.articlesbase.com/quit-smoking-articles/smoking-risks-benefits-of-stopping-126854.html


7 comments ↓

#1 JAC77 on 03.20.09 at 1:19 pm

Third Trimester Smoking?
I met a girl at my antenatal class today who is just a week ahead of me into her pregancy (she is 29 weeks). She was smoking outside the class! Anyway, she is a lovely girl and I asked her had she considered/tried to stop during her pregancy. She said she had tried and manged to cut down, but never managed to kick the habit totally. She said she was scared that there would no longer be a benefit to her daughter by stopping now, and she seemed totally ashamed and beaten. She thinks any damage has been done. I have another class with her next Thursday and want to give her some encouragement that she can still make a difference by stopping now, but is this the case? I'm not sure exactly what risks will be reduced if she does stop now. Any ladies, both smokers and not smokers have any experience or views to share please?

#2 ♥Mommy to 3 month old baby Alex♥ on 03.20.09 at 6:21 pm

Yes if she cuts back now it can help. My husbands co-worker smoked though out her whole pregnancy. He baby was born premature with a few problems at 34 weeks. Smoking can cause the baby to be born early and low birth weight. I would tell her to stop now. Its not too late.
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Baby Alex is 3 months old!

#3 Loving being a Mummy! on 03.20.09 at 6:23 pm

Stopping any time will be of more benefit to her baby than if she continues. The babies lungs will be growing most rapidly in the last trimester and that is when babies put on most of their weight so stopping smoking can only aid that!

Also if she stops now it means she won't be smoking round the baby when its born. In terms of the risk of SIDs, this would be hugely beneficial although you don't want to terrify the poor girl.
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#4 Natty on 03.20.09 at 6:25 pm

Well, if she stops now, then she won't be a smoker once the baby's born, which would eliminate the second hand smoke and cut down on the baby's risk of getting asthma.
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#5 failingsanity22 on 03.20.09 at 6:27 pm

She should definetely be talking to her doctor about this, It isnt safe to just stop cold turkey, And yes she may have already caused damage, However its never too late to stop! and thats kind of common sense, even for a non pregnant smoker. :) just encourage her, and reassure her it will help, smoking is associated with low birth weight, which in itself can cause health problems, so If shes only 29 weeks she could definetely stop now and help her babys health!
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#6 Mommyof2 on 03.20.09 at 6:29 pm

Cutting back definitely helps and in fact when a person has an addiction the doctor will tell you not to go cold turkey but to taper off because when a person goes cold turkey their body goes through withdrawls and can cause more harm then good.
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#7 hmp on 03.20.09 at 6:31 pm

SHOULD NOT SMOKE AT ALL WHEN PREGNANT
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