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Quit Smoking Support Groups Chicago IL

A big problem for many smokers trying to quit is handling the craving for nicotine. Nicotine increases the levels of chemicals in the brain that regulate mood, attention and memory, making it far more difficult to avoid a craving than many people might think. Smokefree.gov, an online resource designed to help those trying to quit, offers the following tips when trying to quit.

Salvation Army
(312) 421-5753
1515 West Monroe Street
Chicago, IL
Womens Treatment Center
(312) 850-0050
140 North Ashland Avenue
Chicago, IL
McDermott Center/Haymarket Center
(312) 226-7984x508
108 North Sangamon Street
Chicago, IL
Family Guidance Centers Inc
(312) 491-2006
123 South Green Street
Chicago, IL
Bernstein, Alice M.
(312) 357-0022
300 West Adams Suite 621
Chicago, IL
Professional Diagnostic Services SC
(312) 491-0404
821 West Van Buren Street
Chicago, IL
Vogt, Kay L
(312) 563-0063
933 W Van Buren
Chicago, IL
Cathedral Shelter of Chicago
(312) 997-3144x237
207 South Ashland Boulevard
Chicago, IL
Chicago Treatment and
(312) 738-3200
555 West Roosevelt Road
Chicago, IL
NEXA at Lake/Ashland
(312) 948-0200
210 North Ashland Avenue
Chicago, IL
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Surviving Quitting Smoking

Surviving quitting smoking

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Monday, January 14, 2008

Quitting smoking is no different than kicking an addiction to drugs or alcohol. Some even suggest it might be harder to avoid a relapse with cigarette smoking than it is with illicit drug use, as the availability of cigarettes (because they''re not illegal) trumps that of illicit drugs.

Perhaps the most telling testament to the difficulty of quitting is the number of people who routinely say "I''ve tried to quit smoking more than once." In fact, those people are very common, says Michael Fiore, M.D., M.P.H., who has acted as director of the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention at the University of Wisconsin since 1992. According to Fiore, the average person who has successfully quit smoking has only done so after five or six failed attempts.

What this underscores is that many smokers are fully aware they need to quit, it''s just that the difficulty of quitting can be overwhelming. However, it''s not impossible, as the more than 40 million ex-smokers in America alone can attest.

A big problem for many smokers trying to quit is handling the craving for nicotine. Nicotine increases the levels of chemicals in the brain that regulate mood, attention and memory, making it far more difficult to avoid a craving than many people might think. Smokefree.gov, an online resource designed to help those trying to quit, offers the following tips when trying to quit.

∗ Replace cigarettes. Many people chew gum in lieu of smoking cigarettes. To make that beneficial, make sure the gum is sugarfree to avoid damaging teeth. Some people simply reach for food when a nicotine craving hits. If you take this road, make sure the food you choose is healthy, such as fruits and vegetables (i.e., carrots, celery, apples).

∗ Learn to relax. Because nicotine affects chemicals in the brain and, in turn, mood, quitting can make a person cranky and restless. In fact, nicotine withdrawal and depende...

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