Showing posts with label anti-tobacco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anti-tobacco. Show all posts

Monday, March 7, 2011

Ways To Quit Smoking

It's about cultivating a novel ways to quit smoking.

Joseph Pandolfino wants to help smokers quit — by letting them smoke as much as they want.

Pandolfino’s company, 22nd Century Group in Clarence, is developing a genetically modified type of tobacco that has 95 percent less nicotine than so-called “light” cigarettes.

The idea is that, by drastically reducing nicotine levels in the cigarettes, smokers who want to quit will be able to continue smoking as much as they want during a six-week, prescription- only treatment program, while reducing their exposure to addictive nicotine.

“These look and taste just like conventional cigarettes,” said Pandolfino, 22nd Century’s founder and chief executive officer. “The only difference is they have 95 percent less nicotine.”

22nd Century executives said they think their products, which are still under development and need various government approvals before hitting the market, could offer smokers a new way to try to kick their unhealthy habit.

“It’s a completely different approach to smoking cessation,” said Henry Sicignano III, 22nd Century’s president. “We give people the cigarettes, which doesn’t alter the behavioral aspects of smoking.”

The company’s very low nicotine cigarette, called the X-22, is in the midst of clinical trials required by the U. S. Food and Drug Administration, which has to approve the smoking cessation aid before it could be sold commercially. To win approval, the trials must show that the X-22 cigarettes can be an effective aid in getting smokers to quit.

So far, company executives said the results have been encouraging. A Phase II clinical trial conducted at the University of Minnesota using 22nd Century’s tobacco found that 43 percent of the participants managed to go four weeks without smoking, better than others who used nicotine lozenges or cigarettes with higher, but still reduced, nicotine levels. Those results still held six weeks after the trial ended, which is significant because most smokers who try to quit end up returning to their old habit.

About two of every five U. S. smokers try to quit each year, but only about 2 percent to 5 percent actually succeed in quitting in the long run. It typically takes eight to 11 tries before a smoker actually is finally able to give up cigarettes for good.

Pandolfino said the X-22 tries to strike a middle ground between quitting cold turkey and using products, such as pills, patches and lozenges, that give smokers reduced, but intermediate- level, exposure to nicotine.

Several studies have shown that

so-called “light” cigarettes, with lower tar and nicotine levels, accomplished little, because smokers compensated for the lower tar and nicotine levels by smoking more cigarettes and by taking longer and deeper puffs.

“It’s less of a shock than quitting cold turkey,” he said. “When you have intermediate nicotine levels, what happens is you compensate for it and you smoke more cigarettes.”

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

National anti-tobacco

Above about no-smoking.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, dramatic number of smokers, too much pressure on the government for 2010-2015, as part of the country's anti - tobacco programs cut was approved.

The recommendations of the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which Russia ratified in April, are now fully reflected in this country's anti-tobacco laws.

Smoking is extremely popular in Russia, with the low cost of cigarettes being a major contributing factor to the trend. According to the Health Ministry figures, almost 40% of Russians are tobacco smokers and an estimated 80% are the so called "passive inhalers." The government plans to bring the number of smokers down to 25% and halve the number of the "passive inhalers".

Under the plan, there will be a shortlist of no-smoking zones to include hospital, schools, orphanage, sports facilities and all types of "indoor" premises. This list may eventually include also public transport, planes, auto- and railway stations, airports and even bust stops. Smoking at cafes and restaurants, clubs and concert halls will also be outlawed. During a special "transition period" people will be allowed to have a drag or two in well-ventilated areas expressly set aside for those who just can't quit.

The concept provides for a complete ban on the tar-content classification of cigarettes, as experts say that all talk about some cigarettes being less harmful than others is simply a means of hoodwinking consumers. There will also be a ban on advertising, sponsoring and stimulation of tobacco sales.

Cigarette smoking itself may soon become a luxury here now that the government is considering the cigarette sales tax to bring it up to par with European standards. All this reflects the aggressive anti-smoking campaign now on elsewhere in the world. There is a total ban on smoking in public places now in effect in Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Malta, the UK, Lithuania, Slovenia, Greece and Cyprus. Japan recently imposed a record 40 percent tax hike on cigarettes in a bid to curb the nation's smoking rate - the highest among major industrialized nations.

The harshest anti-tobacco law, however, is to be found in Finland, where you can wind up in jail for selling just one cigarette to someone who is under age.
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