If you’re seeking to quit your vape pen ― which may be better than cigarettes, but which still contains addictive nicotine, ...
American Lung Association's State of Tobacco Control analyzed every state's policies around smoking. Georgia was one of a few ...
Integrated care (IC) involving medication and intensive counseling provides the best opportunity for smoking cessation in the context of lung cancer screening (LCS).
Overall, our conclusion from this latest review update remains that there is high-certainty evidence that incentives improve smoking cessation rates at long-term follow-up in mixed population studies.
For that reason, the rule could permanently change smoking in America. The FDA insists that the proposal isn’t a ban per se. But in the rule’s intended effect, ban may indeed be an apt term.
Integrated care of nicotine replacement, pharmacotherapy and counseling proved most durable for smoking cessation. Quitline referral and nicotine replacement preferred for screening sites with ...
The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday proposed curbing the level of nicotine in cigarettes to make the products less addictive in an ambitious effort to help more Americans quit smoking.
So it came as a shock to the American public when, on January 11, 1964, their surgeon general appeared on television saying that smoking tobacco leads to disease and death. Luther Terry ...
It is just as important that all policies are balanced with educational programming for teens to further understand the consequences of lifelong dependence and addiction along with proven-effective ...
Since 2007 there have been moves towards stricter regulations on smoking in public spaces across the world. But have any of these had noticeable health impacts? Sally Howard and Geetanjali Krishna ...
Those aged 18 to 24 years have had the largest reduction in smoking prevalence (15.9 percentage points) between 2011 (25.7%) and 2023 (9.8%). Around 5.1 million adults aged 16 years and over (9.8%) ...
It is troubling—and somewhat puzzling—that roughly 11% of adult Americans continue to voluntarily inhale the hot gases of combustion in smoking tobacco, not to mention those now inhaling hot gases ...