>> Hi, I'm Dr. Mike Evans and I think quitting smoking is a journey. For some, it's a short journey full of resilience. But I think for most it's a long journey, a long affair, if you will, of quitting and relapse. A complicated relationship that can have as much to do with a person's relationship with themselves, as with the cigarettes. What starts as a pleasant sensation, an opportunity to rebel or even to belong, is replaced by less pleasure and a feeling of being trapped. A daily or hourly ride of nicotine withdrawal and then another cigarette, which brings relief. Most teens who smoke, think they will in their twenties and actually don't until their forties. Stopping smoking is about making a change and that is something we're not too good at. When I think of change, I think of two concepts. Where you are at and the mechanics of how we change. So, we should start where you are at. When I started medical school, I thought I could take somebody who smoked and convert them into a non-smoker in one fell swoop. Now I see it differently. I focus on where the person is at. You may be in what we call pre-contemplation, where you're not really even thinking about change. Approximately 75% of smokers want to quit. But 25% are not interested. Maybe you're at the contemplation stage, thinking about it, but not quite ready to act. Next is preparation. This is critical with smoking, especially in the likely event that you've tried to quit before. What has worked in the past and what hasn't? What caused the relapse? Maybe you're at the action stage. This is when you're ready to make your move. There's never a perfect time to quit. And at one point you just have to jump. I'll tell my patients, "Hey, it's going to be a challenge now and it's going to be a challenge in five years. So, why not do it now?" And then finally, there's the maintenance stage, where you become a non-smoker and are trying to stay that way. [cheers]. When we make changes it's critical to stop and think, how important is this change to me? And how confident am I in making this change? What we call your self-efficacy. Your job is to be honest. My job is to see if I can move your score towards ten. The second concept is about the different parts of change. So, there's the what. What are we changing? With smoking, I suppose it is straight forward, stopping. But if you think about it, you might be changing lots of things. And I think it is like a relationship breakup. You start by just keeping things simple and low risk. You might breakup your routine a little bit. Avoid certain places. Maybe use that juicer every morning to distract yourself. But you will need to change more than your smoking, to stop your smoking. The next is the why. Why change? I feel like I could do a ten-minute video just on all the medical reasons why not to smoke and they are legion. But I'm going to spare you. Partly because you already know. Partly because you don't need anymore guilt. And partly because in clinic, I actually spend more time asking people what they like about smoking. Which sounds funny, but I think we have to recognize there are positives or at least perceived positives. And I think it's important to reframe these perceptions, if we are to make a change. So, let's run through a few of the common ones. Cigarettes are my friend. They destress me. They relax me. Hmm, I'm not going to deny that you may feel a sense of relief and satisfaction, when you have a cigarette. But I see it a bit differently. You have a nicotine addiction. The nicotine in tobacco is highly addictive. Within a few seconds of inhaling, it travels to your brain causing you to have a temporary high. Over time, your brain changes, causing you to smoke more to get the same effect. We rate your addiction to nicotine with a few simple questions. Do you smoke more than 15 cigarettes a day? Or smoke within 30 minutes of getting up in the morning? Do you find it difficult to go more than four hours without a smoke? The power of nicotine comes from the repeated small doses you give yourself when you smoke. It may seem innocent at first, but if you take 15 puffs from a cigarette and smoke, say, 20 cigarettes a day, that's 300 drug doses a day. You think smoking relieves your stress or is satisfying. But it actually isn't. The cigarette is just making your nicotine addiction go away. Smoking doesn't make your concentration better. It just calms your nicotine receptors cry for more. Smoking makes your heart beat faster. Increases blood pressure and breathing. These are all symptoms of stress, not stress reduction. Let me repeat that. The cigarette just reduces your nicotine stress, not your real stress. I've got a lot of trigger times. Coffee, sex, meals, certain people. Break times, telephone calls, the car. There are a lot of triggers you're going to have to prepare for. You got to change your coffee routine. Plan something to do right after meals. Throw out your car ashtray. I have no advice on sex, but make a plan for breaks or the telephone, with lots of distractions. Know that when you have a hunger or caffeine or other types of pangs, you also have a nicotine pang that needs to be satisfied. You have associated these, but they're actually separate. Alcohol and parties double the risk, as you have the association. Plus, you're imbibing something that intends to lower your resolve. I want something in my hand. Yes, you are making maybe 300 hand motions a day. You may need to replace this by chewing gum or chewing on a straw or a cinnamon stick. Or playing on your cellphone, to keep your hands busy, to replace this daily habit. I will gain weight. Yes, you might. But I think this is actually more marketing than reality. What I call the Virginia Slims effect. On average, people who quit, gain about 2.5 kilograms or five pounds. So, two thoughts on this. Firstly, if this is a concern for you, you might want to focus on strategies that affect calories in and calories out. Such as your new daily routines might focus on walking. A special emphasis on being mindful of emotional eating. Or that your hand mouth routine includes carrots or celery sticks. My second point is about perspective. A possible five pounds may be important from a vanity perspective. But from my doctor perspective, the health return is spectacularly higher, when you stop smoking. Remember, we said smoking was a relationship. Part of the healing of stopping a damaging relationship, is start a new healthy relationship. So, now it's the time to start a deeper relationship with your bicycle or salads or walking or gardening or your support of friends. Next is the how. What do the skills require to change? How do I change, with the emphasis on I? So, what works? Well, let's start with willpower. It's a strange word. On the one hand, it permeates behavior change and all of the interventions we talked about. It's also a word I don't love, as people see it as black and white. If a person succeeds, they have willpower and if they fail, they have no willpower. The science of willpower and smoking gives a mixed message. Approximately 5% of smokers who try to quit cold turkey, achieve prolonged abstinence for six to 12 months. With most relapsing in the first eight days of attempting to quit. And the other hand, most people who quit, do so unassisted. Maybe 2/3 to 3/4 of people do so by themselves. Reconciling these two stats reveal the natural history of smoking cessation, that quote, "failures" are part of this process. And can be seen as dress rehearsals for the eventual success. Another key pearl here is the data which tells us that a perception of the quitting smoking experience is often much darker than reality. In a British study of people who were surveyed about their quit experience, 53% said that it was not at all difficult to stop. Twenty seven percent said it was fairly difficult. And the remainder found it very difficult. So, to summarize, you can do it by yourself. And it may be less difficult than you think. On the other hand, it looks like your chances are better if you layer on some other tactics. So, if you fail, try again. And think about adding another strategy. Some say there are two types of cigarettes. Those that are dealing with your nicotine addiction and those that have become part of a routine. So, let's see what works for both these types of cigarettes. Let's start with treatments that have not been proven affective. And where you may be wasting your money. Now, some of my patients have found they help. And to be honest, if they stop your smoking, I suppose I don't really care. But under this category I put laser therapy, acupuncture and hypnosis. When we compare these treatments to a placebo or just compare them to the quit rates on waiting lists, the rates don't appear to be improved. Next is medications to help stop smoking. The data shows that medications, especially when combined with behavioral support, can double your chance of success. Many patients are resistant, which I get. But I also see an irony in the fact that people are willing to inhale chemicals much, much worse for them. But they won't take a medication for a few weeks or months to stop smoking for the rest of their life. If we use nicotine replacement therapy as an example, it allows people to deal with the addiction of nicotine, without having to inhale the other 7,537 chemicals in cigarettes. And that's what I worry about. People die, two full 747's of people a week in Canada, from smoking, not nicotine. Nicotine replacement therapy comes in multiple forms. And there is usually less nicotine then what you get in a cigarette. You can put on a patch, which is easy and discreet. You can chew gum, although in a different way than you usually chew gum. You can suck on a lozenge or you can use an inhaler. The patch gives you a nice baseline nicotine level to lower your cravings. The latter three, offer the advantage of flexible dosing, when you have a nicotine craving. And a familiar routine of opening packages and putting something in your mouth. The important thing people need to know about nicotine replacement therapy are, firstly, you can design your own nicotine program. You do not need a prescription. Prefer the patch and then the gum or lozenge or inhaler for breakthrough cravings? Great. Maybe you smoke under ten cigarettes a day and just want to use the gum when you need it. Your pharmacist can really help here. People get a bit confused with the cost. NRT is generally cheaper than smoking, but you might be buying a month at once. Moneywise, of course, it's a no brainer. A pack a day is maybe $3,600 a year. imagine what you would do with that money. Imagine what you would do with ten years of that savings. Secondly, with nicotine replacement, you can stop cold turkey or you can wean down your smoking. Taking nicotine and smoking together, does not increase your risk of heart attacks, smoking does. You probably started smoking gradually. And I guess the same can be true of stopping. If you feel you need another month of NRT, then that's fine. I'm not going to go into details of pills for smoking cessation. But I will give you a quick overview of the two most known ones. The first is Zyban or bupropion. This started just as an antidepressant. And then users found their desire for smoking dropped and they were able to quit more easily. Champix or Chantix, in the U.S., is varenicline. It is a newer option that may be even more effective, but also has some side effects that may make it not for everyone. You can discuss these options with your doctor or other healthcare providers. The counseling needs to be individualized. The final approach is the behavioral interventions. I covered some of this ground, but I don't think people realize how many fantastic resources are out there for them. Governments make a lot of money from people who smoke. And they fell into superb programs. You want a text message, a supportive e-mail? You want expert counseling, want to be connected with other people going through the same thing or who have just been there? Or maybe you just want to talk to someone? Go online. Call the help line. Buy the book. Get the message. In the first months following quitting, I want you to prepare for the roadblocks of risk and stress. So, avoid high-risk situations. You know what they are. You might want to tell the people involved in advance. And then I want you to focus on stress reduction. Stressful things are going to happen to you, but you create the stress. Tell people, "Hey, I'm quitting smoking this month." So, what's the least stressful strategy that works. I also get people to think about the three A's. Avoid situations you know are stressful for you. Alter expectations. So, when you look at your to do list, be realistic. Manage the expectations up front before it's stressful. And the final A is acceptance. If we use driving as an example, traffic jams, bad drivers and flat tires happen. Take a deep breath. Focus on what you can control. And accept what you can't. Now, let's say you quit smoking, that's excellent. You've broken up. So, what now? Well, first of all, you're great. Secondly, there's going to be some ups and downs. More ups, especially after you get through the first month. But some of the things to expect with nicotine withdrawal are cravings. And these don't follow a perfect line. Headaches, nervousness, irritability, trouble sleeping. And you may want to eat more. So, have some healthy foods ready. And then also people tend to have more of a cough, as their lungs self-clean. Finally, the Japanese have a proverb that success is falling down seven times and getting up eight times. If you get derailed, don't feel guilty. As I said in the beginning, this is a journey. Come back and see us. This is the best thing I can do for you. Don't learn helplessness. Learn about yourself and get ready for the next round. And thanks for listening.