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Do You Plan to Quit Smoking in 2013?

A study released Tuesday says 34 percent of smokers say this is their year; are you one of them?

 

We here at Patch end up on mailing lists all over the place, for events and stories with absolutely no connection to our coverage areas. While an email we received Tuesday morning follows this path, it's a subject that goes well beyond geographic boundaries.

The Legacy Foundation on Tuesday released a new study indicating 34 percent of smokers plan on quitting in 2013, twice as many as in 2012, the press release notes. How they were able to survey every smoker on the planet must be the work of magic and we are not going to dig deeper for fear they will turn us into a frog or something.

One of the biggest reasons for the higher number of proposed quitters, according to the release, is the increasing cost of visiting Flavor Country.

(For tangential reference, when your happy-go-lucky author first took up the habit all the way back in 1993—yes, he was 14 at the time—Marlboro Lights were $2 a pack, and 20 off-brand smokes could easily be gotten for $1.25. When he last smoked on May 1, 2012, most non-sale-priced cigarettes were about $7 a pack. Some places, like New York City, sell cigarettes for over $11 a pack now.) 

"Unfortunately, the majority of smokers who try to quit without help relapse within the first eight days—a.k.a. today, Jan. 8th," the release states.

Such is the inherent problem with picking a day like New Year's Day to make such momentous, life-altering choices that have a greater chance of being broken. Pick a boring day. Either way, the quitting is the most important part.

What we want to know is if you are one of the 34 percent that they were somehow able to survey, who informed them that 2013 is your year to quit smoking. Have you seen the dropping number of smokers? Is it situation-specific? Let us know in the poll and comments section below.

  • Do you plan to quit smoking in 2013?

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • Yes.
        2 (40%)
    • No.
        1 (20%)
    • I already have. High five!
        1 (20%)
    • I've never smoked. Also, high five!
        1 (20%)
    Total votes: 5
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Health, New Year's Resolutions, Poll, Quitting Smoking, and Smoking

clyde donovan

11:47 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

You people who smoke stink like a dumpster. Your clothes stink, your hair stinks, the inside of your cars and homes stink, and your breath stinks.

$7.00 per pack day X 31 days = $217.00 per month. That's enough to pay for nice, new car that doesn't stink.

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Sick of the trolls

6:07 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Now, "clyde," why would you go and post something like this? You made a coherent, relevant, and valid comment on the Grossi article, and then go and ruin it by making this comment. I thought you might actually be improving, like you really wanted to be a member of this community instead of some worthless troll who does nothing but insult people and make rude comments. I guess there's always tomorrow...

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clyde donovan

11:52 am on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Stop smoking "troll," including the weed, before you die from cancer or emphysema.

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Sick of the trolls

2:06 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

"clyde," the only upside to dying from cancer would be that I would never have to read your posts again. Don't you have anything better to do than stalk me?

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anthony j. popola

4:25 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

watch who you say that to...if you know what i mean

Atta R

2:08 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

There are a lot of options people have now to help them to quit smoking. Support groups, friends & family that encourage/support you can go a long way. And there are prescriptions meds available that help you quit, with high success rates, ie, Chantix. Those might be expensive, because some insurances may not cover, but it still is more cost effective (and health effective) than buying cigarettes.

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