About the Study | How Does This Affect You?

About 36 million Americans smoke cigarettes on a daily basis. While the profound health risks associated with smoking are well-known, so too is the difficulty of quitting. Annual quit rates are less than 4%. Researchers are investigating methods that may lessen cigarettes’ toxic effects among people unable or unwilling to quit, such as reducing the number of cigarettes smoked per day.

Two British researchers carefully analyzed a number of trials designed to reduce daily cigarette use among smokers with the help of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Their findings, in the July 18, 2007 Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2007, showed that smokers using NRT were twice as likely to cut their daily use of cigarettes by 50% and more likely to quit, than those given placebo. However, few smokers maintained the cigarette reduction over time, and blood levels of carbon monoxide did not drop significantly.