Last month, we posted information about NicVAX -- an experimental nicotine quit smoking vaccine and more recently we posted information about Chantix -- a drug that might quadruple success for smokers who want to quit. So this post is not about information we have already posted, but about a few interesting facts I came across while reading a Washington Post news feature Doctors Test Anti-Smoking Vaccine. The reporter mentions a study participant in the anti-smoking vaccine trial currently underway, and said that he has smoked nearly half a million cigarettes in half a century. That is an astonding number of cigarettes, and I don't know that many smokers actually stop to do the math. The news story also quotes Dr. J. Taylor Hays, a smoking cessation expert at the Mayo Clinic, who helped test Chantix, as saying, "The typical patient is a 30-year-old woman who says, 'If I gain 5 pounds, I'm going back,'" referring to women who try quit smoking programs and nicotine replacement aids. There might be safer weight-loss programs out there that do not run the risk of cancer outcome. Just a suggestion.
The article goes on the state that of the more than 48 million smokers in the United States, 40 percent each year make a serious attempt to quit, but fewer than five percent succeed long-term. Two-thirds go back to smoking within a month.
Addiction to cigarettes has been compared to the power of heroin addiction, but it is not impossible to stop and if the researchers keep focusing on better ways to help people quit smoking, everybody wins. Well -- except for the tobacco industry -- but who cares about companies in the business of doing harm.
The Washington Post had done a nice feature on the anti-smoking vaccines being tested with Doctors Test Anti-Smoking Vaccine. I recommend the read.










