No Place For Hypnotherapy And Acupuncture In An Evidence Based NHS Stop Smoking Service, UK

Main Category: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine
Also Included In: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 30 Jun 2008 - 2:00 PDT

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'No Place For Hypnotherapy And Acupuncture In An Evidence Based NHS Stop Smoking Service, UK'

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Smokers wishing to quit would be wasting their money if they use complementary therapies such as hypnotherapy or acupuncture - smoking cessation experts claim today (Monday, June 30).

This and other issues around the most effective ways to help smokers quit will be discussed at the UK National Smoking Cessation Conference in Birmingham on 30 June & 1 July 2008.

Dr Andy McEwen, assistant director of tobacco studies at Cancer Research UK's Health Behaviour Research Centre and programme director for the conference, said: "There is no good research evidence to show that hypnotherapy or acupuncture increase a person's chance of stopping smoking. You may hear people who are convinced that these, or other complementary therapies, helped them stop smoking - but there is no way of knowing whether they would have stopped anyway."

"Anyone who is ready to quit would be more successful by getting in contact with their local NHS Stop Smoking Service for specialist advice and treatment. There is no easy way to stop smoking and if something seems too good to be true, it probably is."

Conference delegates will be debating the motion that 'This house believes that hypnotherapy and acupuncture should be treatments provided by NHS Stop Smoking Services'.

It is likely that the motion will be defeated if findings from the first Annual Smoking Cessation Practitioner Survey are an indication of what those in the field believe. An online survey of nearly 500 specialists working in NHS Stop Smoking Services found that 94 per cent would not recommend hypnotherapy, and 94 per cent would not recommend acupuncture, to smokers wanting to quit.

Smokers should beware of any treatment that claims to have a higher than 50 per cent short-term (i.e. four weeks after quitting) or 20 per cent long-term (i.e. after six months) success rate.

Dr Andy McEwen
Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre
Epidemiology & Public Health
University College London

References

1) Abbot NC, Stead LF, White AR, Barnes J. Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 1998, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD001008. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001008.

2) White AR, Rampes H, Campbell JL. Acupuncture and related interventions for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 1. Art. No.: CD000009. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD000009.pub2.

Annual Smoking Cessation Practitioner (SCP) Survey information

Online survey open to all Smoking Cessation Practitioners working in NHS Stop Smoking Services and carried out in May and June 2008. Survey was run by Dr Andy McEwen of the Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre, University College London.

497 SCP responded to the survey. The full results of the Annual SCP Survey will be posted on the Smoking Cessation Research Network (SCSRN) website (http://www.scsrn.org) in August.

UK National Smoking Cessation Conference 2008 (UKNSCC) 2008 Debate information

Proposing: Maggie Chapman, Fellow of the British Society of Clinical Hypnosis

Amanda Shayle, Chairman of The Acupuncture Society and Research and Development, College of Chinese Medicine

Opposing: Paul Aveyard, NIHR Career Scientist, Department of Primary Care and General Practice, University of Birmingham, UK

Darcy Brown, Health Improvement Lead for Tobacco Control and Smoking Cessation, Darlington and Durham Dales PDA, UK

UK National Smoking Cessation Conference 2008

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Illogical Argument In This Article

posted by Joseph Craig on 2 Jul 2008 at 1:08 pm

It is clear that a person has to want to live smoke-free before any method will be effective long-term. Hypnotherapy is a method that helps the person implement the habits of living smoke free rapidly.

The argument that it cannot be determined if the person would have become smoke free if he or she had not used hypnosis could be applied to any method. In fact, in my experience most of my clients had used other methods with some temporary success before they came to me for program of hypnosis.

I will agree, having facititated hypnosis for more than 30,000 people, that those practitioners who still offer only one session for smoking cessation are fighting against the odds. An excellent psychological study showed that less than 16% of those clients who had one hypnosis session were smoke free for a year. That is about the real long term results for the patch. However, the same study showed that of those clients who had four or five hypnosis sessions, 70% were smoke-free after a year.

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