Quitting smoking is the most important step you can take in treating chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). It is never too late to quit. No matter how long you have had COPD or how serious it is, quitting smoking will help slow the disease and improve your quality of life. Medications and other treatments cannot prevent damage to your lungs if you continue to smoke.
There are clear benefits to quitting, even after years of smoking. When you stop smoking, you slow how quickly further damage develops in your lungs. For most people who quit, loss of lung function is slowed to the normal rate of decline. Although lung damage that already has occurred does not reverse, quitting smoking can delay the worsening of COPD symptoms.
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People who complete a program to stop smoking are most likely to succeed in quitting. If the program includes counseling, the success rate is better.
Certain medications also can help you reach your goal of quitting smoking:
Quitting smoking can be difficult. Those who are most likely to succeed in quitting are those who keep trying, even if they have tried several times before. Hypnosis or acupuncture does not help most people who are trying to quit smoking.
For more information, see the topic Quitting Tobacco Use.
| Author | Lila Havens |
| Author | Robin Parks, MS |
| Editor | Kathleen M. Ariss, MS |
| Editor | Katy E. Magee, MA |
| Associate Editor | Michele Cronen |
| Associate Editor | Tracy Landauer |
| Associate Editor | Pat Truman |
| Primary Medical Reviewer | Renée M. Crichlow, MD - Family Medicine |
| Primary Medical Reviewer | Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Ken Y. Yoneda, MD - Pulmonology |
| Last Updated | June 16, 2006 |
WebMD Medical Reference from Healthwise