Continued from last week
He said, “The turning point came when I returned from a trip abroad and I didn’t buy chocolates for my darling children because I spent all the estacode on cigarettes. “I felt so ashamed of myself and discussed this with my wife. We sought help from a doctor who put me through a timetable that eventually helped me to quit smoking. It wasn’t easy at all, to be honest. I relapsed on some occasions, but I eventually overcame it after a grueling five years. I can boast to the world today that I have been tobacco-free since the 1980s and now I even loathe the smell of it. Mercifully, none of my four beloved children followed my initial smoking footsteps and I couldn’t be more grateful to God for sparing me and my family from the agony of tobacco addiction.” Also speaking with our correspondent, a veteran on-air personality who preferred to speak on the condition of anonymity shared his journey to cigarette addiction before being free from it. He said that his journey to cigarette addiction started after smoking his first cigarette during a visit to the late Fela’s shrine in Ikeja. Sharing his experience, he said, “I had always wanted to be a journalist from my secondary school days as I attended the same secondary school as the legendary Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the Zik of Africa who started his career as a journalist. “This decision pitted me against my lawyer father who wanted me to study law in England and take over his chambers. He dismissed journalists as the rag-tag and bobtail of society and was apprehensive about the economic precariousness of the profession. “The heat at home was too much and I took to going to Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s shrine to watch him perform live. This was where I had my first taste of a cigarette. I never looked back and this habit continued when I secured a scholarship to study journalism at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the United States.” Speaking further, he disclosed that he smoked throughout his university education and continued after returning to Nigeria and beginning his broadcasting career. “I continued smoking there till I returned to the country and started my broadcasting career. While on a vacation abroad, I met my wife and she told me a condition for our dating was that I had to give up smoking. “Under normal circumstances, I would have rebuffed her request but she had something about her that I couldn’t resist. In the name of love, I complied and I overcame the addiction. Although it took me three years to completely kick the habit with a few relapses. Thankfully, I was tobacco free before our eventual marriage.”

Nicotine in tobacco highly addictive –WHO
According to the World Health Organisation, the nicotine contained in tobacco is highly addictive. The WHO also stated that tobacco use is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, over 20 different types or subtypes of cancer, and many other debilitating health conditions. The global health agency said that every year, more than eight million people die from tobacco use, adding that most tobacco-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, which are often targets of intensive tobacco industry interference and marketing. Tobacco, WHO said, can also be deadly for non-smokers, adding that second-hand smoke exposure has been implicated in adverse health outcomes, causing 1.2 million deaths annually. “Nearly half of all children breathe air polluted by tobacco smoke and 65,000 children die each year due to illnesses related to second-hand smoke. Smoking while pregnant can lead to several life-long health conditions for babies,” WHO stated.
How to quit cigarette Smoking
Experts say many smokers are aware of the dangers of tobacco and want to quit smoking, even though many do not find it easy. They, however, noted that counseling and medication can more than double a tobacco user’s chance of successfully quitting. The WHO stated that currently, only 23 countries provide comprehensive cessation services with full or partial cost coverage to assist tobacco users to quit, noting that this represents just 32 per cent of the world’s population. It says that health professionals have the greatest potential of any group in society to promote the reduction of tobacco use. Quitting smoking: How die-hard smokers overcame cigarette addiction
Health risks of tobacco smoking addiction
Experts say several studies show that few people understand the specific health risks of tobacco which include lung cancer, heart disease, and stroke, but noted that advice from health professionals can increase quitting success rates by up to 30 per cent, while intensive advice increases the chance of quitting by 84 per cent.
Efforts of WHO to curb tobacco addiction
Under the WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, countries are mandated to treat tobacco use and dependence. WHO provides capacity-building and training packages to help governments establish or strengthen their national tobacco cessation systems including integrating brief tobacco interventions into their primary care systems, and developing national toll-free quit lines and cessation projects. Offering help to quit is also one of the five key interventions in the MPOWER package of technical measures and resources which WHO introduced in 2007.
Cigarette smoking addiction can be treated –Expert
A Nigerian but UK-based General Practitioner with the NHS England, Dr. Adaiah Yahaya, however, said people battling cigarette smoking addiction can be helped to quit smoking. He said: “Cigarette smoking addiction occurs when there is a continuous need for smoking even when the harmful effects are evident. It is characterised by an urge to always smoke, unpleasant symptoms called withdrawal when one stops, and a propensity to avoid places or people that do not support smoking “Cigarette smoking is harmful because it can affect one’s health and well-being. Smoking can lead to damage to the lungs and also lung cancer. It increases the risk of other cancers e.g colon and breast and increases the risk of heart disease, strokes and ultimately early death. Smoking addiction can also lower socioeconomic status, and trigger social ostracisation and stigmatisation, especially in conservative societies. “It is difficult to quit smoking because cigarettes contain nicotine that stimulates the pleasure centres of the brain but this effect is short-lived so smokers keep smoking to reproduce this pleasure.”
Smokers need help
Dr. Yahaya stressed that those addicted to cigarette smoking may need specialists’ help to quit. “Cigarette addicts need help from a specialist to help them overcome addiction. This can be achieved through counseling and providing medical alternatives to cigarettes in the form of patches, gums, or sweets that contain nicotine which is the active ingredient in cigarettes. “There is no rigid timeline to overcoming cigarette addiction but a willingness to give up smoking, but the right specialist help is key. Relapse can be prevented by therapy and developing healthy habits to replace smoking e.g exercise – surrounding oneself with supportive people who are non-smokers,” Dr. Yahaya said.
