
Volume 10 • Issue 3 • Summer 2006

Smoking
is a well-known health hazard for people of all ages, including babies
born to mothers who smoke. Doctors urge everyone – male or female, young
or old – not to smoke or to quit smoking.
In adults, smoking
raises the odds of heart disease, cancer, stroke, high blood pressure, and
other serious health problems. When women smoke while pregnant, they're
more likely to miscarry, have a stillborn child, give birth prematurely
and have a baby with low birth weight and/or lung problems.
About 11 percent of pregnant women in the
U.S. are smokers, according to the Centers for Disease Control’s latest
statistics. The number of pregnant smokers in Greene County is nearly
double the national average – about 20 percent of live births, according
to the Springfield-Greene County Health Department’s 2006 Community Health
Report Card.
“Stopping smoking is one major thing a
woman can do to really make a big difference in the health of her
pregnancy,” says Gerald Joseph, M.D., medical director for St. John’s
Women’s Services.
“We aren’t here to make pregnant smokers feel bad or
guilty about their smoking," he continues. " We know nicotine is one of the most, if not
the most, addictive substances known, and that it takes several tries for
most people to quit. That’s why we as medical providers start educating
pregnant smokers as early in the pregnancy as possible about the risks of
smoking and secondhand smoke. Evidence has shown that if a pregnant smoker
stops smoking by 16 weeks gestation, nearly all of the potential negative
effects of smoking are gone by the time she delivers.”
Dr. Joseph says nicotine replacement therapy and medication, such as the
antidepressant Wellbutrin, are available through the patient’s OB/GYN or
through St. John’s Smoke-Free Babies program to help pregnant smokers
quit.
“We have to weigh the benefits with the risks when prescribing any
medication to a pregnant woman,” Dr. Joseph says. “With heavy smokers, the
benefits almost always outweigh the risks of these medications, if it
helps these women stop smoking.”
| The more cigarettes you
smoke per day, the greater your baby's chances of developing
health problems. |
Health Department Director Kevin Gipson – who calls the percentage of
pregnant smokers in Greene County “unacceptable” – urges pregnant smokers
to take advantage of the Health Department’s and area hospitals’ smoking
cessation programs, which are often designed specifically to help pregnant
women break the habit.
St. John’s Smoke-Free Babies program
includes an initial one-on-one consultation with a trained smoking
cessation counselor to develop an individualized plan of action, weekly
phone follow-up with a smoking cessation counselor, medication
therapy/nicotine replacement as approved by the patient’s physician, and
assistance with stress management.
To schedule an appointment with a smoking cessation counselor, please call
417-820-3400 or 888-242-6538, or ask your St. John’s OB/GYN for a
referral.
Smoking during pregnancy can cause:
- Miscarriage
- Stillbirth
- Birth defects
- Placenta previa and placental abruption
(when the placenta detaches from the uterine wall before the baby is
born)
- Premature rupture of membranes
- Intrauterine growth restriction and low
birth weight
- Baby to require care in the Newborn
Intensive Care Unit
- Baby to have bronchitis and pneumonia,
ear infections, asthma, increased risk for lung disease or cancer later
in life, colic (unexplained crying and irritability), SIDS (Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome), behavioral disorders or ADD (Attention Deficit
Disorder).
SECOND-HAND SMOKE
Risks for children living with smokers include:
More
frequent doctor visits. Increased
risk of asthma and other lung ailments.More
school days missed due to ear and respiratory infections.
Increased
risk of becoming a smoker themselves. |
Tips to help you quit
- Get help – join St. John’s Smoke-Free
Babies or other smoking cessation program. Call a St. John’s Smoke-Free
Babies counselor at 417-820-3400 or 888-242-6538 to get started.
- Evaluate your past and present smoking
habits.
- Make a plan.
- Tell everyone you know.
- Find someone to quit with you.
- Write yourself a contract.
- Remove the smoking triggers.
- Avoid situations and behaviors that
promote smoking. Do not go places where many people are smoking such as
bars or clubs, and smoking sections of restaurants.
- Drink fewer caffeinated beverages;
caffeine may stimulate your urge to smoke. Also avoid alcohol as it may
also increase your urge to smoke and can be harmful to your baby.
- Change your habits connected with
smoking. If you smoked while driving or when feeling stressed, try other
activities to replace smoking.
- Keep mints or gum (preferably sugarless)
on hand for those times when you get the urge to smoke.
- Stay active to keep your mind off
smoking and help relieve tension: take a walk, exercise, read a book or
try a new a hobby.
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