A ground-breaking Auckland University study has found it is
possible to smoke your way to quitting by using virtually
nicotine-free cigarettes.
The research found a higher quit rate among heavily addicted
smokers offered nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) and the
cigarettes with hardly any nicotine than those given just NRT
patches, gum or lozenges.
"It's an exciting finding," lead researcher Dr Natalie
Walker, of the university's clinical trials research unit,
said last night.
People in the "intervention" arm of the trial were given a
six-week supply of the low-nicotine Quest brand of tobacco
cigarettes.
"No matter how hard they try to smoke them, they are not
going to get any kick out of it," Dr Walker said, "so what
they then do is end up weaning themselves off the cigarettes.
"Part of smoking is the behavioural component of putting
something in their mouth and feeling the smoke in their mouth
and feeling it come down into their chest - all that ritual
around smoking. These cigarettes help deal with that.
"The good thing about it is that people naturally stop using
them ... after six weeks, or even earlier for some people."
Dr Walker said the study was "a bit controversial, because
people think, 'How can you give people cigarettes to quit
smoking, it doesn't make sense', but ... these have such a
very low level of nicotine".
"They are equally as harmful as any other cigarette, except
they are less addictive ... but they are very clearly
addressing that behavioural aspect."
The low-nicotine cigarettes are not commercially available to
New Zealand smokers.
The policy implications of the trial include possibly adding
low-nicotine cigarettes to quit-smoking efforts and
encouraging tobacco manufacturers to supply them.
As part of the Government's goal for New Zealand to be
"smokefree" by 2025, the Health Research Council has awarded
$5 million for research work which will investigate policies
such as introducing low-nicotine, lower-tax cigarettes, and
limiting and progressively cutting the amount of tobacco
which can be sold.
- Martin Johnston
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