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November is a great time to try again to kick the smoking habit. ×Ö´®3 I say "again" because, as a 30-year-smoker who tried to quit for 25 of those years, I'm pretty sure all smokers try to quit again and again. ×Ö´®9 During November, carrying on the work of journalist Peter Jennings, ABC News is presenting a series of reports on quitting smoking and lung cancer prevention. ×Ö´®9 November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month and November 17th is the American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout. It's a perfect time for the 51 million Americans who still smoke cigarettes to make a serious effort at quitting so they won't be part of the 160,000 who die from smoking each year in the U.S. ×Ö´®7 There is help, especially during November. ×Ö´®8 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Cancer Institute, and the North American Quitline Consortium is providing resources to help people quit smoking. There's a national network of quitlines, 1-800-QUIT-NOW, which automatically connects callers to their state-based quitlines, and to the Web site smokefree.gov ( http://www.smokefree.gov ) for additional resources on quitting and lung cancer. ×Ö´®6 ABCNews.com is devoting a portion of its Web site to "Quit to Live: Fighting Lung Cancer." The section includes links to smoking cessation resources; and a "Quitters Blog" documenting peoples' attempts to quit smoking. ×Ö´®3 The Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout helps smokers quit cigarettes for at least one day, in hopes they will quit forever. ×Ö´®7 A big mistake ×Ö´®3 Smoking cigarettes was the biggest mistake of my life. ×Ö´®7 To quit, I tried everything from shock therapy to hypnosis. My wife left me in a motel in my underwear for days so I couldn't buy cigarettes. I finally was able to quit during a 10-day hospital stay with a collapsed lung. Something about having a steel rod shoved into my chest with no anaesthetic to reinflate the lung made me really want to quit. ×Ö´®1 But the damage was done. Chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and worst of all, allowing my wife's and daughter's lungs to be polluted year after year by my second-hand smoke. ×Ö´®3 The primary cause of lung cancer is tobacco smoke. Today, lung cancer deaths are falling in states with strong tobacco control laws. ×Ö´®8 Chemicals and nicotine ×Ö´®7 The Cancer Society says cigarette smoke contains 4,000 chemicals, including 43 known to cause cancer. The tobacco burns while a cigarette is smoked, exposing the smoker and others to these deadly chemicals, tars and gases. ×Ö´®2 Nicotine does not cause cancer, but it does keep many people addicted to smoking. Each puff of a cigarette delivers a concentrated dose of nicotine straight to the brain -- and reinforces the need for the next puff. ×Ö´®4 Even after you've given up nicotine, you may still want to smoke. To maximize your chances of staying smoke-free for good, you need a plan. ×Ö´®9 The Cancer Society ( http://www.cancer.org ) can help you come up with a plan, taking you step by step through making the decision, preparations, and following through. ×Ö´®8 Moving from one step to the next requires careful thought and preparation. And, no, it won't be easy. But this time, this month, it might just work. ×Ö´®2 Watch the news. Think about it. Call the quitline. Work on your plan. ×Ö´®6 It's a great time to try again. ×Ö´®9
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