Quit Smoking

Stop Smoking Drug Section


 

Stop Smoking Drug Navigation


|

Quit Smoking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Quitting Smoking Makes Your Dentist Smile |
Quitting Smoking |
Smoking Statistics For Adolescents Get Worse Every Year |
Smoking Statistics For Adolescents Get Worse Every Year |
Quitting Smoking Makes Your Dentist Smile |
Stop Smoking! Kick The Smoking Habit Now! Live A Smoke Free Life |
Medicines To Help You Stop Smoking Are They Effective |
Medication To Help You Quit Smoking A Detailed Study |
Quitting Smoking |
Quitting Smoking |
Putting An End To Smoking Assistance Cells In Canada |
Dangers Of Cigarette Smoking |
Why You Should Stop Smoking |
Quitting Smoking |
Living A Life Without Smoke |

List of Quit-Smoking Articles

Best products

Cigarrest to Stop Smoking in 7 Days!



Best Stop Smoking Drug products

Sitemap



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Stop Smoking Drug sponsors


 

Latest Stop Smoking Drug Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Stop Smoking Drug!



Newest Best Sellers


 

Welcome to Quit Smoking

 

Stop Smoking Drug Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Heart Attacks Reduced In Ireland Since No Smoking Ban

from: According to doctors, the rate of heart attacks in Ireland fell by around one tenth in the year following the nationwide ban on smoking in the workplace and other public places such as pubs and restaurants.

Edmond Cronin of the Cork University Hospital and his colleagues have completed and analysis of patients admitted with heart attacks to hospitals in the southwest of Ireland and this showed an 11% fall for the year after the ban came into effect in March 2004.
He said “This should further encourage health authorities to enforce more smoking bans around the world” when interviewed at the annual European Society of Cardiology Congress where he presented the data.
Smoking can lead to heart disease, lung cancer and other respiratory conditions, and is one of the leading causes of preventable deaths in the world today.
Additional it increases the risk of heart problems like angina, heart failure and heart attacks by contributing to the build-up of cholesterol plaques of the artery walls, leading to narrowing or blockage.
More recent research also suggests that inhaling tobacco smoke, either directly or passively, can trigger a heart attack.
Other research which was presented at this week's cardiology congress concluded that while the dangers of smoking are becoming ever more clear to us all, one in five patients diagnosed with heart disease still continues to smoke.



Stop Smoking Drug Specific links

Stop Smoking Drug News