Vaping can be addictive too as it contains nicotine!
Signs and symptoms, medical conditions are similar to smoking:
E-cigarettes contain nicotine, a drug that’s highly addictive.
You don’t have to vape every day to get addicted. anxiety and depression: Nicotine makes anxiety and depression worse. It also affects memory, concentration, self-control, and attention, especially in developing brains.
STOP SMOKING
Stop smoking is the single most important preventable illness and death
5 MILLION PEOPLE DEATHS worldwide From smoking and related causes
DO YOU WANT TO BE ONE OF THEM?
One will have urges or cravings to smoke, but these last for a couple of minutes and they disappear and come back a little while later, the key is to resist the urges.The first few weeks are the toughest!!!
YOU CAN DO IT!!!
NOT A SINGLE PUFF!!!!!
BECOME A NON-SMOKER !!!!!
LOOK AT THE BENEFITS OF QUITTING
Time | Beneficial health changes that take place |
20 minutes | Blood pressure and pulse rates return to normal |
8 hours | Nicotine and carbon monoxide levels in blood reduce by half. Oxygen levels will start to return to normal |
24 hours (1 day) | Carbon monoxide should be eliminated from the body. Lungs start to clear out mucus and other smoking debris |
48 hours (2 days) | Should be no nicotine cigarettes left in the body. Ability to taste and smell improves. |
72 hours (3 days) | Breathing becomes easier. Airway tubes begin to relax and energy levels increase |
2-12 weeks | Circulation improves |
3- 9 months | Coughs and breathing problems improve as lung function is increased by 10%. |
1 year | Risk of heart attack falls to half that of a smoker |
10 years | Risk of lung cancer fall about half of that of a smoker |
15 years | Risk of heart attack falls to the same as someone who has never smoked |
Source: ASH fact sheet No.11 November 2005
The reasons that cigarette smoking is so highly addictive are thought to be:
(1)Benowitz NL. Nicotine addiction. N Engl J Med 2010;362(24):2295–2303. doi: 10.1056/NEJMra0809890
(2) Mogg K, Bradley BP, Field M et al. Eye movements to smoking-related pictures in smokers: relationship between attentional biases and implicit and explicit measures of stimulus valence. Addiction 2003;98(6):825–836. doi: 10.1046/j.1360-0443.2003.00392.x
The Pharmaceutical Journal, January 2018;Online:DOI:10.1211/PJ.2018.20204033