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How one in five have given up smoking
New Scientist vol 136 issue 1845
- 31 October 92, page 6
Hypnosis is the most effective way of giving up smoking,
according to the largest ever scientific comparison of
ways of breaking the habit. Willpower, it turns out, counts
for very little.
Smokers are coming under increasing pressure to quit. Earlier
this month the Institute of Actuaries published the results
of a study it commissioned which showed that the mortality
rate for smokers is twice as high as for nonsmokers, and
that, on average, a smoker dies 6 years earlier than a
nonsmoker.
Surveys suggest that three in four smokers would like to
give up, according to the antismoking campaign Action on
Smoking and Health (ASH).
To find the most effective way to give up smoking, Frank Schmidt
and research student Chockalingam Viswesvaran
of the University of Iowa carried out a meta-analysis, statistically
combining the results of more than 600 studies
covering almost 72 000 people from America, Scandinavia and
elsewhere in Europe.
By combining the results from so many separate studies,
the meta-analysis enables the real effectiveness of each
technique to be picked out from the statistical 'noise'
that often blights studies involving smaller numbers of
subjects.
The results, published in the current issue of the Journal
of Applied Psychology, show that the average success rate
for all methods was 19 per cent: that is, only about one
in five smokers is likely to succeed using methods covered
by the study.
Patients told that they had serious cardiac disorders,
and so a clear incentive to stop immediately, had the highest
quitting rate, at 36 per cent. But
for most smokers the most effective technique was hypnosis, in which smokers
go into a state of deep relaxation and listen to suggestive
tapes. The analysis of treatment by hypnosis, which included
48 studies covering over 6000 smokers, gave an average
success rate of 30 per cent for this method.
'Combination' techniques, combining, for example, exercise
and breathing therapy, came second with a success rate
of 29 per cent. Smoke aversion, in which smokers have their
own warm, stale cigarette smoke blown back into their faces,
achieved a 25 per cent success rate, followed by acupuncture
at 24 per cent.
The least successful method turned out to be advice from GPs,
which appears to convince virtually no one to give up.
Sheer willpower proved little better, with a success rate
of only 6 per cent. Self-help, in the form of books or
mail-order advice, achieved modest success - around 9 per
cent, while nicotine gum was a little better at 10 per
cent.
'We found that involvement of physicians did not have as
big an impact as we
expected' said Smidt 'We speculate
that the reason is that it is the content of the treatment that matters,
and not the status of the person giving it.'
David Pollock, director of ASH, said he was surprised by the success of hypnosis,
which anecdotal evidence had suggested was not very effective. One organisation
not surprised by the results is the British Society of Medical &
Dental Hypnosis. Christopher Pattinson, the society's academic chairman, said
that current hypnosis techniques are
a far cry from their popular image of music-hall tricks involving swinging fob
watches. The latest relaxation techniques
achieve success rates of up to 60 per cent from a single session, he said.
Richard Doll, the epidemiologist who carried out the pioneering studies of
the risk of smoking, said that the apparent success of hypnosis and the high
quitting rate of patients with heart disease backed his own observations.
He added, however, that he was somewhat surprised by the low success rate
of those who resorted to willpower alone: 'The majority of people find it
not too difficult to give up,' he said. 'The only way to succeed is to want
to do it enough. You have got to really appreciate what the risk is. I smoked
and gave up without too much difficulty.'
ROBERT MATTHEWS
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