CONTACT A+ SMOKER's CONTROL
- 14359 Miramar Parkway,
Suite 172 Miramar, FL 33027 - 1 888-79 READY
1 888 797-3239 -
- Andrew.Knowles@aplussmoke
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"With no program at all, 95% of quitters fail, and only 5% succeed." - Tobacco Free Organization
Quit smoking today! With this complete, four part course, you get the support you need to help you break the habit! The four formulas are precision fortified with a variety of Nutritional Support, vitamins, and minerals. A+ Smoker's Control® helps provide distaste for cigarettes (tobacco), assists in removing nicotine from the body, helps decrease cravings and withdrawal symptoms, helps reduce the stress and anxiety of smoking cessation, and provides a calming effect to increase confidence. Effective for cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, snuff, dip, chew... If it has tobacco, we can help!!
According to the American Cancer Society you must answer these questions before you consider smoking cessation:
1) Why do I want to quit smoking? (Do I really want to quit smoking?)
2) What method will I use to quit smoking? (Do I have a plan?)
3) How do I stay smoke free? (How do I prevent relapse?)
Tobacco use remains the single most preventable cause of disease and premature death in the
Nearly 25% of adult Americans currently smoke, and 3,000 children and adolescents become regular users of tobacco every day. The societal costs of tobacco-related death and disease approach $100 billion each year. However, more than 70% of all current smokers have expressed a desire to stop smoking; if they successfully quit, the results will be both immediate and long-term health improvements.
Smoking is the most common risk factor for the development of lung cancer, which is the leading cause of cancer death. It is also associated with many other types of cancer, including cancers of the esophagus, oral, oropharyngeal, nasal cavity, larynx, kidney, urinary bladder, stomach, liver, colon, breast, prostate, pancreas, cervix and Leukemia. Smoking also increases the risk of other health problems, such as chronic lung disease and heart disease. Smoking during pregnancy can have adverse effects on the unborn child, such as premature delivery and low birth weight.
Cigarettes and cigarette smoke contain close to 5,000 chemicals, including 69 known to cause cancer. Many of these chemicals are added in the processes of tobacco farming and cigarette production. The tobacco burns while a cigarette is smoked, exposing the smoker to these deadly chemicals, tars and gases.
Nicotine occurs naturally in tobacco and does not cause cancer, but it does keep many people addicted to smoking. Nicotine in cigarettes can be very addictive. Each puff of a cigarette delivers a concentrated dose of nicotine straight to the brain -- and reinforces the need for the next puff. Even after you've given up nicotine, you may still have the urge to puff.
Even after you've given up nicotine, you may still have the urge to smoke. To maximize your chances of staying smoke-free for good, you need a plan.
A+ Smoker’s Control® is different. You won't find a drop of nicotine. A+ Smoker’s Control® helps to remove every roadblock to your success, through its Nutritional Support.
You know you can quit smoking - millions have! All you have to do is to take that step. You know you WANT to quit smoking. All you were looking for was some help. Well, it's here.
What do I have to look forward to as a nonsmoker?
The health benefits of smoking cessation (quitting) are immediate and substantial. Almost immediately, a person's circulation begins to improve and the carbon monoxide (chemical carcinogen found in cigarettes) level in the blood begins to decline. A person's pulse rate and blood pressure, which are abnormally high while smoking, begin to return to normal. Within a few days of quitting, a person's sense of taste and smell return, and breathing becomes increasingly easier.
People who quit smoking live longer than those who continue to smoke. After 10 to 15 years, a previous tobacco user’s risk of premature death approaches that of a person who has never smoked. About 10 years after quitting, an ex-smoker's risk of dying from lung cancer is 30 percent to 50 percent less than the risk for those who continue to smoke. Women who stop smoking before becoming pregnant or who quit in the first 3 months of pregnancy can reverse the risk of low birth weight for the baby and reduce other pregnancy-associated risks. Quitting also reduces the risk of other smoking-related diseases, including heart disease and chronic lung disease.
There are also many benefits to smoking cessation for people who are sick or who have already developed cancer. Smoking cessation reduces the risk for developing infections, such as pneumonia, which often causes death in patients with other existing diseases.
Quitting smoking reduces the risk for developing cancer, and this benefit increases the longer a person remains "smoke free." People who quit smoking reduce their risk of developing and dying from lung cancer. They also reduce their risk of other types of cancer. The risk of premature death and the chance of developing cancer due to cigarettes depend on the number of years of smoking, the number of cigarettes smoked per day, the age at which smoking began, and the presence or absence of illness at the time of quitting. For people who have already developed cancer, quitting smoking reduces the risk of developing another primary cancer.
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