home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0622>
- <title>
- Mar. 25, 1991: Why Quitting Means Gaining
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 55
- Why Quitting Means Gaining
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Sad but true: giving up cigarette smoking means battling the
- bulge, especially for women
- </p>
- <p>By Janice M. Horowitz--With reporting by Lynn Emmerman/Chicago
- and Joseph J. Kane/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> Quitting cigarettes is generally something to celebrate, but
- for many ex-smokers there is a weighty price to pay on the
- scale. Last week a study by the Centers for Disease Control
- confirmed what many former smokers have learned from
- experience: people who swear off smoking can expect to gain
- weight--an average of 3.8 kg (8 lbs.) for women, 2.8 kg (6
- lbs.) for men. More disturbing is the finding that 1 in 8 women
- who quit--and 1 in 10 male quitters--add a hefty 13 kg (29
- lbs.) or more, while continuing smokers tend to gain much less.
- The CDC's report, published last week in the New England
- Journal of Medicine, noted that certain groups are particularly
- likely to lose the battle of the bulge, among them blacks,
- people under 55 and those who smoked more than 15 cigarettes
- a day.
- </p>
- <p> The CDC's study is not the first to link quitting with
- gaining, but it represents the most comprehensive work to date.
- Epidemiologist David Williamson and his research team reviewed
- data on 1,885 smokers and 768 nonsmokers who were studied over
- a period of 13 years. The report provides the clearest
- demonstration that women gain more than men, notes Neil
- Grunberg, medical psychologist at Bethesda's Uniformed Services
- University, who wrote an accompanying editorial. "It's very
- impressive."
- </p>
- <p> Why do people plump up after giving up cigarettes? There are
- several emotional and behavioral factors, including simply the
- habit of putting something into one's mouth. But experts
- increasingly believe physiological factors play the largest
- role. Nicotine, found in tobacco, speeds up physiological
- functions, especially the rate at which the body metabolizes
- food. "Though people will tell you they smoke to relax, in
- reality, they're all charged up," says psychologist Daniel
- Kirschenbaum of Chicago's Northwestern Memorial Hospital. A
- smoker's heart rate, for instance, averages 84 beats a minute,
- compared with 72 beats for a nonsmoker. When smoking stops,
- metabolism slows down, food is burned more slowly and the
- pounds can start piling on. Research by psychologist Richard
- Keesey at the University of Wisconsin suggests the added pounds
- represent a return to a more normal weight. Smoking, he says,
- "artificially lowers the body weight."
- </p>
- <p> Recent quitters frequently feel an almost uncontrollable
- urge to gorge on sugary, high-carbohydrate foods. This too is
- probably due to the powerful influence of nicotine. In smokers,
- the drug lowers the level of insulin in the bloodstream, which
- in turn decreases the craving for sweet-tasting food. Grunberg
- has shown in laboratory animals that removing nicotine causes
- insulin levels to rise, prompting greater consumption of
- sweets. This sweet-tooth effect is far more pronounced in
- female animals than in males, which may explain the difference
- found between the two sexes in the CDC study. But researchers
- are baffled by the increased vulnerability of blacks to weight
- gain. Says Williamson: "More work needs to be done."
- </p>
- <p> Health officials are concerned that the desire to stay slim
- may be contributing to the high rate of smoking among teenage
- girls, who tend to take up the habit at a younger age than
- boys. Just this month the American Journal of Public Health
- reported that more than twice as many adolescent girls as boys
- said they were worried about gaining weight if they quit
- smoking. In years past, cigarette companies capitalized on such
- fears. Lucky Strike ads in the 1920s encouraged women to "Reach
- for the Lucky Strike Instead of a Sweet." Unfortunately, doctors
- note, even modest weight gains can loom large for women: a
- gain of 8 lbs., for instance, can translate into a different
- dress size; for men it may only mean letting the belt out a
- notch or two.
- </p>
- <p> Specialists offer a host of recommendations for warding off
- the weight. "Just making people aware that nicotine withdrawal
- may lead to an increase in their appetite is often enough to
- prevent them from putting on the pounds," says Chicago
- internist Robert Gluckman, an obesity specialist. Chewing
- nicotine gum to cut down the physical withdrawal from the
- addiction is also often advised, as is engaging in some form
- of aerobic exercise to help push up the metabolic rate. To
- satisfy the craving for sweets, Grunberg suggests, quitters
- should sprinkle everything, from meat to poultry to fruit, with
- a sugar substitute.
- </p>
- <p> National smoking-cessation programs also provide clever
- techniques to help people adjust to life without a cigarette
- dangling from their mouth. Smokenders, based in Connecticut,
- explains that a person puffs about 10 times for every cigarette
- smoked, or 200 times a day for every pack. With this in mind,
- the group teaches people to brush and floss after each meal in
- order to "give mouths plenty of that attention they're
- missing," says seminar director Charlotte Tausz. She also
- suggests "ways of engaging in noncaloric pucker responses" like
- sipping water through a straw or sucking on ginger root and
- cinnamon sticks.
- </p>
- <p> Will the CDC study discourage smokers from snuffing the
- habit? If so, this would be a terrible mistake, says
- Kirschenbaum, who adds that the health risk of smoking a pack
- and a half to two packs a day "is equal to carrying 60 to 80
- extra pounds in body weight." Smoking, which leads to 400,000
- U.S. deaths a year, "is about the most dangerous thing a person
- can do," affirms Tausz. "I'd rather see someone be a few pounds
- heavier and a nonsmoker, than smoke and be skinny." No doctor
- would disagree, but try telling that to a teenage girl.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-