Dearborn, Mich. – ACCESS encourages smokers to make this the year they commit to quit. The start of a new year is an opportune time for giving up unhealthy habits, like using cigarettes, hookah and other tobacco products.
Quitting tobacco is challenging because nicotine is a highly addictive drug. However, there are resources and tools available to help tobacco users kick the habit. Planning ahead, seeking support from friends and family and talking to a health care provider can all increase the likelihood of quitting successfully.
"Using the available resources can help people make 2015 tobacco-free, yielding a lifetime of health benefits,” said Ahlam Bokari, ACCESS Health Educator.
According to the American Cancer Society, the benefits of quitting smoking are immediate. Within 20 minutes of quitting, blood pressure drops; and within 24 hours, a person’s chance of getting a heart attack decreases. The benefits continue for years, including reduced risk of lung cancer, stroke and heart disease.
Counseling smokers to quit is ranked as one of the most cost effective and clinically preventable burdens of disease and injury, second only to vaccinating children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In addition to talking to a health care provider, there are numerous proven and effective methods available to help Michigan residents quit tobacco use, including:
For more information, please contact ACCESS Public Health Coordinator Corey Beckwith at 313-216-2208 or cbeckwith@accesscommunity.org, or call the Michigan Tobacco Quitline at 800-QUIT-NOW (800-784-8669).
About ACCESS
Grounded in a grassroots commitment to serving our community, ACCESS has a 43-year history of providing health, education, employment and social services. An Arab American nonprofit of excellence, ACCESS empowers residents of metro Detroit to lead healthy, informed and productive lives and extends this mission nationally through advocacy, arts, culture and philanthropy.