UAE-wide Smoking Cessation Clinics Offer Counselling and Medications to Help People Quit Smoking - World No Tobacco Day - May 31
Dubai, United Arab Emirates: UAE addiction experts are warning that nicotine in cigarettes is as addictive as heroin and other opiates, which is why so many people find it so hard to quit smoking successfully without counselling and medication.
The doctors' comments come ahead of World No Tobacco Day on May 31 when people across the globe commit to stop smoking - a habit that increases the risk of respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease, cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that tobacco caused 100 million deaths worldwide over the course of the 20th century (1).
This year the key message from local doctors is that although willpower is an important factor in giving up smoking most people need extra help from healthcare professionals at smoking cessation clinics, where they can go through a step-by-step programme for addiction to nicotine.
According to the WHO even brief advice from healthcare professionals can increase tobacco abstinence rates by up to 30 percent (2).
"Nicotine is addictive - there is a lot of confusion about this but it is highly habit forming to most people even more than opiates and heroin," said Dr. Ahmed Yousif, Consultant Psychiatrist and Medical Director of the National Rehabilitation Centre, Abu Dhabi.
"Many people underestimate nicotine's addictiveness and they try to give up smoking and fail. But they should not be disheartened; addiction to nicotine is a chronic disease like diabetes and many people cannot succeed on will power alone, they need to take part in a programme that offers counselling, medication and information to help them quit and that is what smoking cessation clinics offer," added Dr. Yousif.
"As physicians, we recognise the role willpower plays in putting people on the path to quitting but it's rarely enough to see them through to the end. Support from a qualified healthcare practitioner has been shown to play a pivotal role in helping smokers make a serious commitment and improve their chances of giving up smoking," explained Dr. Emad Kowatli, Consultant of Internal Medicine and Pulmonologist at the American Hospital, Dubai.
Smoking cessation clinics change smokers' behaviour by assessing people's physiological, psychological and behavioural dependence on nicotine, offering counselling that works through the pros and cons and teaches useful life skills such as stress management. Doctors can also prescribe nicotine replacement therapies or non-nicotine smoking cessation therapies to help reduce cravings for nicotine and remove the satisfaction smokers get from cigarettes.
"Self-commitment and the support of family and friends can give people the motivation they need to start on the road to quitting but visiting a doctor or a smoking cessation clinic, where therapies and treatments are on hand, can significantly boost their chances of success instead of relying on willpower alone," concluded Dr. Kowatli.
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© Press Release 2011



















