Posted by www.iwanttoquitsmoking.com
Nicotine gum, patch and lozenge
marketing continues to assert
that clean nicotine weaning
products double a smoker's
chances of quitting. Recent
findings raise serious concern
over whether they benefit
or are a barrier to those
seeking freedom from nicotine.
(Charleston SC) October 15
2003--Do over-the-counter
(OTC) nicotine replacement
therapy (NRT) products like
the nicotine gum, patch and
lozenge really help smokers
quit? "Double your chances"
has been the cornerstone of
NRT marketing for almost two
decades but just how useless
must a product become before
warranting a close examination
of what's being doubled?
A March 2003 study review
published in Tobacco Control
combined and averaged all
OTC NRT studies and found
that 93% of nicotine patch
and gum study participants
relapsed to smoking within
six months.
The study's financial disclosure
indicates that the primary
authors were NRT industry
consultants. Despite seven
months since the study's release
and despite reflecting the
combined results of all seven
OTC studies, the CDC, NIH,
FDA, state health departments,
and all major health organizations
have chosen not to share this
horrific 7% midyear abstinence
finding with smokers. But
why?
Could pharmaceutical industry
government influence possibly
have become so strong? Could
major health non-profits have
themselves become addicted
to large annual NRT industry
contributions for allowing
their trusted influence and
websites to be used as storefronts
to sell nicotine products
to nicotine addicts?
NRT use recommendations also
fail to warn youth about their
chances and risks. After generating
a dismal 5% six-month quitting
rate among 101 adolescent
smokers, a study published
in the January 2000 edition
of Archives of Pediatrics
& Adolescent Medicine (APAM)
concluded that the patch was
ineffective in helping youth
smokers quit.
A June 2003 youth NRT use
survey, also published in
APAM, raises the additional
concern that teenage never-smokers
are possibly becoming chemical
slaves to the daily use of
NRT products. Among the 216
surveyed youth who asserted
they had used NRT, 40 represented
that they had "never smoked
a cigarette, not even a few
puffs" and 7 of the 40 reported
using NRT every day.
Aside from the almost secret
treatment accorded NRT's adult
and youth six-month relapse
rates, smokers have long been
kept in the dark regarding
one other critical NRT shortcoming.
How are the 7% adult and 5%
youth midyear quitting rates
impacted by a second or subsequent
NRT attempt?
The study experts call it
"recycling" and the only known
study was published in a journal
entitled Addiction in April
1993. Sadly, practice does
make perfect with NRT in perfecting
the odds of defeat. Not a
single nicotine patch user
who relapsed in a patch study
a year earlier was still quit
six months into their second
patch attempt - zero, none.
Deprived of their natural
odds of recovery, how many
smokers may have believed
in and toyed with NRT for
so long that they actually
ran out of time and chances?
Recent studies are not the
only bearers of bad NRT news.
Smoker survey findings published
in the September 11, 2002
edition of the Journal of
the American Medical Association
concluded that "NRT appears
no longer effective in increasing
long-term successful cessation
in California smokers." London
and Minnesota smoker surveys
also found no benefit.
If so, why continue depriving
smokers of basic performance
info that would empower them
to make meaningful decisions
in how to spend their priceless
periods of confidence, in
trying to break nicotine's
grip upon their brain's dopamine,
adrenaline and serotonin pathways?
And how can the industry continue
asserting that NRT is twice
as effective as quitting on
your own?
According to evidence table
data presented in the June
2000 U.S. Clinical Practice
Guideline, the historical
on-your-own success rate for
those not using any products
or programs is roughly 10%
at six months.
Those marketing NRT ignore
a quitter's 10% natural recovery
ability and instead look inward
to declare victory over a
group of placebo device users
within the study, where, amazingly,
only 3 to 4% succeed in quitting
for six-months. But why three
times lower?
What if you so deeply believed
in the NRT marketing hype
that you agreed to participate
in a study in hopes of receiving
12 weeks of free patches?
What if you were quickly able
to sense or detect that you
were not getting your regular
dose of nicotine but had instead
been randomly assigned to
receive the placebo patch?
Would frustrated expectations
cause you to find an excuse
to relapse?
In one of the studies used
to compute the March 2003
OTC NRT findings, at study's
end only 18.3% of those in
the placebo patch group believed
that they had received the
"Real McCoy." Although the
authors clearly state that
"the effect of such a blinding
failure would probably be
a reduction of the placebo
effect," it didn't stop the
industry from relying upon
it in claiming yet another
internal "double your chances"
odds ratio victory.
Aside from blinding failures,
the placebo devices in a number
of studies did not meet the
classic definition of "placebo"
as, supposedly for masking
purposes, they contained from
1 to 3 mg. of nicotine.
The average smoker receives
1 mg. of nicotine from each
cigarette smoked. The average
pack-a-day smoker inhales
roughly 20 mg. daily. In NRT
studies they are routinely
assigned to the 21 mg. patch
where they are expected to
engage in weeks or months
of gradual stepped-down weaning.
By contrast, the blood-serum
of a cold turkey quitter is
100% nicotine free by day
three and 90% of nicotine's
metabolites have passed through
their urine. It's then that
withdrawal normally peaks
in intensity and begins to
gradually subside.
But what if their brain neurons
were never allowed to sense
and bathe in nicotine-free
blood serum? What if instead
they were forced to cope with
from 1 to 3 mg. of nicotine
contained in a placebo device?
How many pack-a-day smokers
could sneak puffs from one
to three cigarettes for weeks
and still quit? Could it alter
the intensity and/or duration
of normal withdrawal, or even
drive their spirit into the
ground? Would it be honest
to declare to the world that
they had attempted to quit
"on their own" and failed?
The average nicotine addict
only musters the confidence
to venture beyond their thick
wall of protective denial
and attempt a mad dash for
freedom about once every three
years. With smoking eventually
claiming half of all adult
smokers, each an average of
about 14 years early, the
number of attempts available
to each of them is limited.
Prior to NRT's arrival local
abrupt nicotine cessation
programs in communities around
the globe were routinely generating
midyear rates of 20%, 30%,
40% and in some cases almost
50%.
In the 1990s the U.S. government
invited eleven researchers
with a history of financial
ties to the pharmaceutical
industry to join seven researchers
with no known associations
in rewriting and declaring
U.S. cessation policy. In
June 2000 the full panel published
a revised U.S. Clinical Practice
Guideline declaring NRT use
a mandatory cessation recommendation.
The 2000 Guideline was a death
sentence for many non-NRT
quitting programs as they
were no longer considered
"science-based," were out-of-step
with U.S. cessation policy,
and, unless willing to play
by new rules, no longer credible
candidates for funding.
The pharmaceutical industry
made billions while forcing
short two to four-week cold
turkey programs to accept
quitters engaged in months
of toying with nicotine weaning
products. It made graduation
day as disturbing as attending
an AA meeting where everyone
was drunk.
The American Cancer Society's
2003 Cancer Facts and Figures
report indicates that 91.2%
of all successful long-term
quitters quit without the
nicotine patch, gum, lozenge,
inhaler, without Zyban or
Wellbutrin, and without hypnosis
or acupuncture. They did it
entirely on their own. Shouldn't
we be searching for and sharing
their secrets?
The key to effective cessation
isn't in renaming the addictive
substance medicine, labeling
its use therapy, pretending
that those addicted to it
can gradually wean themselves
off, or in hiding true NRT
performance rates while ignoring
that the odds for second time
users drop to near zero. It's
in learning to fully and comfortably
engage life without reaching
for the addictive substance.
Education, understanding,
new skills and solid support
- the same tools enhancing
success rates in all human
endeavors - dramatically increase
the prospects of nicotine
dependency recovery. Isn't
it time they regained center-stage
and that pharmaceutical companies
were sent back to the lab
to find a magic cure with
a bit lower failure rate than
93% for adults, 95% for youth
and 100% for second time users?
Posted by www.iwanttoquitsmoking.com
About the Author
South Carolina nicotine cessation
educator.
www.iwanttoquitsmoking.com
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