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January - February 2022

ARMC Tobacco Cessation Department

March 2022 Issue

 
 
 

 Currently, the Tobacco Cessation Department at Anaheim Regional Medical Center (ARMC) serves over 3,700 people who want to quit smoking each year. On average, this means the department helps 10 people quit smoking every single day. With a staff of 11 and services offered in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, Korean, and Farsi, the Tobacco Cessation Department has come a long way since 2003, when it was first established at ARMC.

Being blessed is a condition of the heart and a frame of mind.
— Erin Rhorie
 

In January - February, we helped 496 people quit smoking!

NEW-LUNG has helped people who want to quit smoking and vaping. Below is the number of people who have received NEW-LUNG services this quarter.

January

Patients 187

Adults 30

Youth 29

February

Patients 173

Adults 39

Youth 38

TOTAL 496

If you know anyone who is ready to quit smoking, call 1-866-639-5864. Free services in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, Korean, and Farsi.

SEE WHAT’S INSIDE

03 WHAT MAKES YOU LUCKY?

04 DOES SMOKING AFFECT HAPPINESS?

05 QUIT SMOKING WORD SCRAMBLE

06 DISPARITIES IN SMOKING AND RACE/ETHNICITY SEMINAR

 

What Makes You Lucky?

 

Does Smoking Affect Happiness?

Nicotine is known to briefly elevate mood. When smoker inhale nicotine and tobacco products, the brain triggers “feel-good” neurochemicals called endorphins and increases dopamine levels. However, this increase is thought to only occur for a short amount of time.

Given dopamine is linked with reward, researchers believe that smoking increases happiness initially but increases the need for more nicotine once that dopamine dies down. It is believed that this leads smokers to pick up more and more cigarettes as their day goes by because the brain wants to maintain that feeling of satisfaction or relief.

Nicotine hijacks the reward and feel-good system of the brain, leading to an unbalanced mood. This can cause individuals to feel and report being less happy compared to those without nicotine.

The data is clear: happiness can decrease once people take up smoking.

Many people may take up smoking as a response to feel temporary happiness when the feelings of unhappiness are present.

The good news is that people who quit smoking report increased happiness. According to studies, ex-smokers happiness levels were at the same level with that of nonsmokers after a year or more of quitting.

 

Quit Smoking Word Scramble

 

Disparities in Tobacco Use and Race/Ethnicity Seminar

 

Please RSVP if you would like to sign up.

CALL 1-866-NEW LUNG (639-5864)

Free quit vaping classes are available.

*Must attend ALL CLASSES of 5 session class series.

Participants receive a FREE SUPPLY OF NICOTINE PATCHES.

Funded by the Orange County Health Care Agency/Tobacco Use Prevention Program.