Herbal Remedy Articles


    Smoking - What You Should Know and How To Quit
    Article courtesy of Native Remedies

    Do you have, or had, “Quit Smoking” on your list of New Year’s resolutions as you have had for
    many years past?

    A study published recently in the Journal of Clinical Psychology says that people who make New
    Year's resolutions have higher rates of success at changing their behavior than people who don't
    make resolutions.

    "At least 40 percent of adults make one or more resolutions each year, and at least two-thirds
    of these pledges concern life-threatening behaviors - tobacco smoking, obesity and inactivity,
    for example - which psychologists have extensively studied and successfully treated" according
    to an article published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology (Vol. 58(4), 397-405 (2002)).

    The decision to quit smoking is one that only you can make. Others may want you to quit, but the real
    commitment must come from you! Quitting permanently is the final, and most important, stage of the
    process. You can use the same methods to accomplish this as you did to help you through withdrawal.
    Think ahead to those times when you may be tempted to smoke, and plan on how you will use
    alternatives and activities to cope with these situations.

    Why Quit?

    Health concerns usually top the list of reasons people give for quitting smoking. Smoking can, of
    course, cause lung cancer and lung diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis, but few
    people realize it is also a risk factor for many other kinds of cancer as well, including cancer of the
    mouth, voice box (larynx), throat (pharynx), esophagus, bladder, kidney, pancreas, liver, cervix,
    stomach, colon and rectum, and some leukemias. These progressive lung diseases are usually
    diagnosed in current or former smokers in their 60s and 70s. You're also more likely to suffer from
    hardening of the arteries and shortness of breath. Smokers are twice as likely to die from heart
    attacks as nonsmokers. Smoking causes premature wrinkling of the skin, bad breath, bad smelling
    clothes and hair, and yellow fingernails.

    When you smoke, you're exposing yourself to more than 4,000 chemicals, including cyanide, benzene,
    and ammonia -- and at least 40 of those chemicals can cause cancer and smoking hurts every organ
    in your body. Smokers between the ages of 35 and 70 have death rates three times higher than those
    of people in the same age range who have never smoked. The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
    recently estimated that adult male smokers lost an average of 13.2 years of life and female smokers
    lost 14.5 years of life because of smoking. No matter what your age or how long you've smoked,
    quitting will help you live longer.

    People who stop smoking before age 35 avoid 90% of the health risks attributable to tobacco. Even
    those who quit later in life can significantly reduce their risk of dying at a younger age. Ex-smokers
    also enjoy a higher quality of life with fewer illnesses from cold and flu viruses, better self-reported
    health status, and reduced rates of bronchitis and pneumonia. Regardless of your age or smoking
    history, there are numerous advantages to quitting smoking. There are several visible and immediate
    rewards to quitting as well as long-term benefits, reducing risks for diseases caused by smoking and
    improving your health in general. Quitting helps stop the damaging effects of tobacco on your
    appearance including premature wrinkling of the skin, bad breath, stained teeth, gum disease, bad
    smelling clothes and hair, yellow fingernails. Some benefits that will gain gradually in the first few
    weeks after quitting will be that you will notice that food tastes better, your sense of smell will return
    to normal, your ordinary activities will no longer leave you out of breath, and your health and life
    insurance premiums should drop.

    How to Quit?

    There is no one right way to quit, but there are some key elements in quitting smoking successfully.
    These crucial factors include:

    * Making the decision to quit
    * Setting a quit date and choosing a quit plan
    * Dealing with withdrawal - Take it day -by day -- or even trigger -by trigger. This may sound like
    "addiction-speak," but it works. To approach the process by thinking, "I can't wait until I've been
    nicotine-free for a week" won't help you with that craving you get with your morning coffee on the
    very first day.
    * Maintenance or staying off cigarettes

    Your body benefits as soon as you stop smoking. Within 20 minutes of that last cigarette, your body
    begins a series of healthful changes that continue for years. This deep healing is mostly invisible to
    the person experiencing it except for the gradual loss of a smoker's cough, an increase in energy,
    and the like. After a couple of days, your abilities to smell and taste improve and your damaged nerve
    endings start to repair themselves. Within a few months, walking and other physical activities will
    become easier and your lung function will increase by up to 30 percent. After five years, you'll have
    nearly halved your odds of getting lung cancer.

    Look at the amazing and remarkable healing progression over time:

    20 Minutes After Quitting
    Your heart rate drops.

    12 hours After Quitting
    Carbon monoxide level in your blood drops to normal.

    2 Weeks to 3 Months After Quitting
    Your heart attack risk begins to drop.
    Your lung function begins to improve.

    1 to 9 Months After Quitting
    Your Coughing and shortness of breath decrease.


    1 Year After Quitting
    Your added risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a smoker’s.

    5 Years After Quitting
    Your stroke risk is reduced to that of a nonsmoker’s 5-15 years after quitting.

    10 Years After Quitting
    Your lung cancer death rate is about half that of a smoker’s. Your risk of cancers of
    the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder, kidney, and pancreas decreases.

    15 Years After Quitting
    Your risk of coronary heart disease is back to that of a nonsmoker’s.

    Compared to Smokers, your…

    Stroke risk is reduced to that of a person who never smoked after 5 to 15 years of not smoking

    Cancers of the mouth, throat, and esophagus risks are halved 5 years after quitting

    Cancer of the larynx risk is reduced after quitting

    Coronary heart disease risk is cut by half 1 year after quitting and is nearly the same as
    someone who never smoked 15 years after quitting

    Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease risk of death is reduced after you quit Lung cancer
    risk drops by as much as half 10 years after quitting

    Ulcer risk drops after quitting

    Bladder cancer risk is halved a few years after quitting

    Peripheral artery disease goes down after quitting

    Cervical cancer risk is reduced a few years after quitting

    Low birth weight baby risk drops to normal if you quit before pregnancy or during your
    first trimester the benefits of quitting

    This year make the resolution with confidence with the help of Native Remedies’ Stop Smoking
    Solution Pack – a combination of three proven, effective and safe NATURAL remedies; because
    Native Remedies knows that you are worth it too. The Stop Smoking Pack includes:

    Rx-Hale Tablets prevents symptoms of nicotine withdrawal naturally, before they start. These
    tablets contain a combination of Hypericum perforatum (St. John's Wort), Scuttelaria Laterifolia,
    and Chromium Picolinate to assist with the management of depression and mood swings. Used
    for four weeks before you stop smoking, Rx-Hale Tablets ensure that when your first day without
    cigarettes arrives you'll feel confident and prepared! Rx-Hale Tablets ensure that your efforts to
    stop smoking are not foiled by depression, mood swings and sugar cravings.

    Crave-Rx Drops controls nicotine cravings naturally without using harmful and expensive nicotine
    products. Crave-Rx comes in tincture form and contains the herbs Avena Sativa, Garcinia
    Cambogia, and Gotu Cola (Centella Asiatica) which have a balancing effect on brain chemicals
    known to be associated with addiction. These herbs also help prevent sugar cravings and overeating
    which often cause people to go back to cigarettes due to unwanted weight gain.

    Triple Complex NicoTonic assists in promoting the bio-availability of nutrients, hormones and bio-
    chemicals usually depleted by stress of nicotine and drug withdrawal. NicoTonic contains Natrium
    Phosphate, Kalium Phosphate and Natrium Muriaticum as a treatment for the 'short fuse' syndrome
    frequently associated with nicotine withdrawal. Regular use prevents irritability, temper outbursts and
    is effective in reducing restlessness associated with withdrawal from nicotine or other addictive drugs.

    Do You Know That Smoking and Asthma are
    Interrelated?

    What is the link between smoking and asthma?
    As you have read, smoking is especially and extremely harmful to the respiratory system. So for
    people with asthma, tobacco smoke frequently tops the list of the most common triggers of an asthma
    attack. An asthmatic does not have to smoke to be affected, as even second–hand smoke can trigger
    asthma attacks or cause permanent harm to the airways, making it easier to have an asthma attack
    in the future. Anyone with an asthmatic condition who smokes should immediately quit. Smoking can
    greatly complicate an asthmatic condition by damaging the lungs, even if it does not trigger an attack.
    The airways in a person with asthma are very sensitive and can react to many things, or "triggers."
    Coming into contact with these triggers often produces asthma symptoms. Tobacco smoke is a
    powerful asthma trigger. When a person inhales tobacco smoke, irritating substances settle in the
    moist lining of the airways and can set off asthma episodes. Often, people with asthma who smoke
    keep their lungs in a constant state of poor asthma control and have ongoing asthma symptoms.
    Also, when a person with asthma is exposed to second-hand smoke, he or she is more likely to
    have asthma symptoms. Children with asthma are especially sensitive to second-hand smoke.
    Second-hand smoke harms children with asthma even more than adults. When a child is exposed
    to tobacco smoke, his or her lungs also become irritated and produce more mucus than normal. But
    the child's lungs are smaller, so smoke can cover them quickly. Children of parents who smoke are
    also more likely to develop lung and sinus infections. These infections can make asthma symptoms
    worse and more difficult to control.

    Native Remedies now has a new tool to not only help you or someone you love stop smoking, but
    also one to treat, control and soothe asthma symptoms and problems in yourself, a loved one, or
    friend! Find out more about our proven, effective and natural asthma remedies, BioVent and
    BronchoSoothe today!
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