What is the American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout? It's an annual event held on the third Thursday of every November, a date on which smokers nationwide are asked to give up smoking. Quitting for just one day helps you take action toward a healthier life and reduce your lung cancer risk.
Each year, the Great American Smokeout calls attention to lung cancer and other chronic disease deaths that are caused by smoking tobacco and how to prevent them. As a result of this event, there have been actions taken towards reducing the health impacts that smoking can have on smokers and non-smokers, including:
Each of these elements is reason enough to hold the Great American Smokeout. However, the event also helps smokers to make a plan to quit smoking and serves as an access point to information on the many tools that are available to help you eliminate the habit from your life.
Of course, quitting isn't easy. And it's hard to do it alone. But you don't have to.
But while quitting smoking may be a challenge, you'll find that eliminating smoking from your life offers a wide array of health benefits, too, some of which you may feel almost immediately.
Quitting tobacco also results in other health benefits: the risk of diabetes is lowered, and your blood vessels, heart, and lungs all work more effectively. Smokers live 10 years less than non-smokers, but by quitting smoking before age 40, your risk of dying from diseases related to smoking decreases by a whopping 90%!
Want to participate in the Great American Smokeout? Here's how: take that all-important step toward a much healthier life by making a plan to quit smoking. If you are one of our local Oregonians, the Oregon Health Authority has developed Smoke-Free Oregon, which provides assistance to those who want to stop smoking. The program includes counseling sessions, educational materials, and a 24-hour helpline. Their toll-free number is 1-800-QUIT-NOW. If you are not local, most states have a similar program.
If you're a non-smoker hoping to help a loved one, here are some do's and don'ts from the American Cancer Society that you can use to help someone quit — and possibly save their lives or your own!