Categories · Health/Science
· Federal
· Cessation
· Tobacco Control
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Jump to full article: PR Newswire, 2008-05-07 Author: SOURCE American Lung Association
Intro: Today the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services published an update to its 1996 Public Health
Service Clinical Practice Guideline, Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence,
which contains revised and improved recommendations to providers and
clinicians so that they can better assist smokers in quitting. The
guideline also confirms that there has never been a better time for smokers
to quit than right now.
With the release of these new guidelines, smokers can receive improved
strategies from physicians and other health care providers to help
successfully quit smoking. The guidelines definitively state that combining
FDA-approved pharmacotherapies and counseling is the most effective way for
smokers to end addiction to tobacco products. The Public Health Service
also finds that cessation treatments are cost-effective and that providing
these treatments through healthcare systems will increase the number of
people who seek treatment for smoking, attempt to quit and successfully
quit.
"These new guidelines underscore how important it is for smokers to
receive assistance quitting," said Bernadette Toomey, President and CEO, of
the American Lung Association. "The American Lung Association stands ready
to help smokers quit through our different smoking cessation programs and
resources."
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