More Smokers Kicking The Habit In England With Help Of NHS Services

Main Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 30 Jan 2008 - 1:00 PDT

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Nearly 165,000 smokers managed to kick the habit in the summer of 2007 with the help of NHS Stop Smoking Services, a report by The Information Centre for health and social care (The IC) revealed yesterday.

Half the 327,800 who used the service successfully quit between April and September 2007, a period which coincided with the introduction of the smoking ban in most public places in England on July 1.

This is a 28 per cent increase in the number of successful quitters and a 29 per cent increase in the number of people setting a quit date through NHS Stop Smoking Services compared to the same period in 2006.

The findings from the report, Statistics on NHS Stop Smoking Services in England, April to September 2007, are based on the number of smokers setting a quit date and the number who successfully quit by a four week follow-up.

Other key findings were:

Of the 8,619 pregnant women who set a quit date, 4,084 successfully quit. Success at the four-week follow up increased with age, from 37 per cent of those aged under 18, to 59 per cent of those aged 60 and over. Tim Straughan, Chief Executive of The IC, said: "This report gives a valuable insight into NHS Stop Smoking services and includes the first findings since the smoking ban was introduced. It shows more and more smokers are accessing NHS Stop Smoking Services and many of these are successfully kicking the habit. It also suggests NHS Stop Smoking Services coped well with increased demand after the ban came into force."

A full version of the report is here.

Notes:

The Information Centre (The IC) is England's authoritative, independent source of health and social care information. It works with more than 300 health and social care providers nationwide to provide the facts and figures that help the NHS and social services run effectively. Its role is to collect data, analyse it and convert it into useful information which helps providers improve their services and supports academics, researchers, regulators and policymakers in their work.

The IC also produces a wide range of statistical publications each year across a number of areas including: primary care, health and lifestyles, screening, hospital care, population and geography, social care and workforce and pay statistics.

This quarterly report presents provisional results from the monitoring of the NHS Stop Smoking Services in England during the period April to September 2007. It includes information on the number of people setting a quit date and the number who successfully quit at the 4 week follow-up. It also presents a more in depth analysis of the key measures of the service, including pregnant women, breakdowns by ethnic groups and regional analyses at Government Office Region, Strategic Health Authority and Primary Care Trust levels. In 2007/08 there have been new data items added to the collection. This includes data for successful quitters by treatment option and ethnicity. In addition, for the first year, the collection includes information on Champix (varenicline) as a smoking cessation aid.

The Information Centre

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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The Information Centre. "More Smokers Kicking The Habit In England With Help Of NHS Services." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 30 Jan. 2008. Web.
11 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/95473.php>

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