CANBERRA, July 2 (Xinhua) — Offering various nicotine replacements or vapes with behavioral support helps people leaving rehab stay smoke-free, a group where long-term quitting is rare, a new clinical trial has found.
The study, which tracked over 360 adults exiting detox programs, added to growing evidence that, with consistent support and a variety of nicotine replacement options, people in recovery can achieve meaningful progress in quitting smoking, according to a release on Tuesday from Flinders University in South Australia which led the study.
This potentially saves lives and reduces the heavy health burden associated with tobacco use in this vulnerable population, according to the study published in the July issue of the Lancet Public Health.
“People recovering from substance use are more than twice as likely to smoke as the general population — and far more likely to suffer and die from tobacco-related illness,” said the study’s lead author Billie Bonevski, director of the Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute.
Participants were randomly assigned either a 12-week supply of vapes or a combination of nicotine replacement therapy products such as patches, gum, lozenges, inhalators, and mouth sprays. Both groups also received behavioral counseling through Quitline services, the researchers said.
After nine months, 10 percent of participants in both groups remained smoke-free, a notable achievement in a population with high smoking rates and typically low quit success, the study showed.
“This isn’t about one therapy outperforming another — it’s about building a system that gives people the best chance to succeed,” Bonevski said, adding ongoing support and access to multiple quit tools matter more than the type of nicotine therapy, calling for smoking cessation to be fully integrated into addiction treatment. ■