Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking

Today, the treatment approaches recommended for smoking cessation are pharmacological and behavioral therapy. Both approaches are reported to be effective alone; however, when used together, the success rate increases. Modern medicine methods, however, often have a negative image due to cost, comple...

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Main Author: Nurten Arslan Işık
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ivano-Frankivsk National Medical University 2020-06-01
Series:Galician Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ifnmujournal.com/gmj/article/view/1136
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spelling doaj-479f0a11b7ce456bb61f881d54a6ca532021-04-02T21:05:30ZengIvano-Frankivsk National Medical UniversityGalician Medical Journal2414-15182020-06-01272E202022E20202210.21802/gmj.2020.2.21136Aromatherapy and Quitting SmokingNurten Arslan Işık0Erzincan Binali Yildirim University, Erzincan, TurkeyToday, the treatment approaches recommended for smoking cessation are pharmacological and behavioral therapy. Both approaches are reported to be effective alone; however, when used together, the success rate increases. Modern medicine methods, however, often have a negative image due to cost, complexity and limitations in human life. For this reason, complementary and alternative therapies are widely used in the community for the treatment of many diseases in every age group. When people are asked why they prefer complementary and alternative therapies, the most important reason seems to be to improve quality of life by providing symptom control. Other reasons include economic problems, the lack of health insurance, the improvement of quality of life, the influence of the media and the environment, a strong belief that it will help, disappointment of conventional treatment failure, the noninvasiveness of most complementary and alternative therapies, fear of medical treatments, dissatisfaction with the current health system, medicines. Avoiding side effects can be called as a desire to have more control over health decisions. Contrary to many pharmacological and behavioral treatments that investigate the effectiveness of smoking cessation, only a few studies have included complementary and alternative treatments. Complementary treatment methods such as aromatherapy are thought to be regularly included in smoking cessation programs and their use should be ensured/expanded.https://ifnmujournal.com/gmj/article/view/1136aromatherapyessential oilnicotine craving
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nurten Arslan Işık
spellingShingle Nurten Arslan Işık
Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
Galician Medical Journal
aromatherapy
essential oil
nicotine craving
author_facet Nurten Arslan Işık
author_sort Nurten Arslan Işık
title Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
title_short Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
title_full Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
title_fullStr Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
title_full_unstemmed Aromatherapy and Quitting Smoking
title_sort aromatherapy and quitting smoking
publisher Ivano-Frankivsk National Medical University
series Galician Medical Journal
issn 2414-1518
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Today, the treatment approaches recommended for smoking cessation are pharmacological and behavioral therapy. Both approaches are reported to be effective alone; however, when used together, the success rate increases. Modern medicine methods, however, often have a negative image due to cost, complexity and limitations in human life. For this reason, complementary and alternative therapies are widely used in the community for the treatment of many diseases in every age group. When people are asked why they prefer complementary and alternative therapies, the most important reason seems to be to improve quality of life by providing symptom control. Other reasons include economic problems, the lack of health insurance, the improvement of quality of life, the influence of the media and the environment, a strong belief that it will help, disappointment of conventional treatment failure, the noninvasiveness of most complementary and alternative therapies, fear of medical treatments, dissatisfaction with the current health system, medicines. Avoiding side effects can be called as a desire to have more control over health decisions. Contrary to many pharmacological and behavioral treatments that investigate the effectiveness of smoking cessation, only a few studies have included complementary and alternative treatments. Complementary treatment methods such as aromatherapy are thought to be regularly included in smoking cessation programs and their use should be ensured/expanded.
topic aromatherapy
essential oil
nicotine craving
url https://ifnmujournal.com/gmj/article/view/1136
work_keys_str_mv AT nurtenarslanisık aromatherapyandquittingsmoking
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