"Ouch" what was that? It seems that it can be a popular course to follow. The appeal I suspect is similar to the 'quick fix quit cure' that the pill offers. Main difference of course is you attend a clinic and after the payment you are subjected to, well, an injection.
This quit smoking injection will contain a combination of drugs, the application of which will be repeated at least twice more, or so. If you are thinking that it will be done and dusted on the day, wrong.
After your initial jabs/shots you will have to go back for much of the same treatment or take the drugs by mouth over the next fortnight roughly. Like the pills, the quit smoking injection is designed to have an effect on your nervous via your bloodstream.
This in turn is supposed to block your brain receptors where the nicotine does its work on you. The master plan behind all this is to not have you suffer withdrawal symptoms.
The burning question of course, is the quit smoking injection effective? Reports suggest 20% to 80%. That suggests quite a gap for speculation I would say. Also there doesn't seem to be a set parameter as such stating when the 'patient' should be cured. Or putting it another way, has the patient 'quit' by a month or 3, or 6?
It has been suggested by independent sources that the quit rate is probably at the lower end of 20% to 80%
If I was considering something like this I should probably go and seek advice from my doctor, especially if I'm on medication. It's a free world and you can take your own choices and if it works for you then great.
If you have tried it already without success, don't despair. You may find life is short changing you right now but never give up. If you do, you have lost!
"If it is difficult, it is worth doing." (I don't know who said that but I love it)
This quit smoking injection will contain a combination of drugs, the application of which will be repeated at least twice more, or so. If you are thinking that it will be done and dusted on the day, wrong.
After your initial jabs/shots you will have to go back for much of the same treatment or take the drugs by mouth over the next fortnight roughly. Like the pills, the quit smoking injection is designed to have an effect on your nervous via your bloodstream.
This in turn is supposed to block your brain receptors where the nicotine does its work on you. The master plan behind all this is to not have you suffer withdrawal symptoms.
The burning question of course, is the quit smoking injection effective? Reports suggest 20% to 80%. That suggests quite a gap for speculation I would say. Also there doesn't seem to be a set parameter as such stating when the 'patient' should be cured. Or putting it another way, has the patient 'quit' by a month or 3, or 6?
It has been suggested by independent sources that the quit rate is probably at the lower end of 20% to 80%
If I was considering something like this I should probably go and seek advice from my doctor, especially if I'm on medication. It's a free world and you can take your own choices and if it works for you then great.
If you have tried it already without success, don't despair. You may find life is short changing you right now but never give up. If you do, you have lost!
"If it is difficult, it is worth doing." (I don't know who said that but I love it)
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