Smoking Cessation Support in Houston Heights
Why Quitting Matters
The good news is that quitting reverses much of this damage over time. Within hours of your last cigarette, your heart rate and blood pressure begin to drop. Within weeks, circulation and lung function improve. Within years, your risk of heart disease, stroke, and cancer decreases significantly. No matter how long you’ve smoked or how much, quitting brings immediate and long-term benefits.
Beyond the physical health improvements, quitting smoking saves money, improves your sense of taste and smell, gives you more energy, and protects the people around you from secondhand smoke.
Why Quitting Is So Hard
Physical Dependence
Psychological Habits
Fear of Failure
How We Can Help
Personalized Assessment
Medication Options
Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) provides controlled doses of nicotine without the harmful chemicals in cigarettes. Options include patches, gum, lozenges, inhalers, and nasal sprays. These products help ease withdrawal while you work on breaking the behavioral habit.
Prescription medications like bupropion and varenicline work differently than NRT. Bupropion reduces cravings and withdrawal symptoms by affecting brain chemistry. Varenicline blocks nicotine receptors in the brain, reducing both the pleasure of smoking and withdrawal discomfort.
We discuss which options might work best for you based on your health history, preferences, and previous experiences with quitting.
Behavioral Support
Ongoing Follow-Up
Preparing to Quit
What to Expect
As time passes, cravings become less frequent and less intense. Most people find that after several weeks, they think about smoking far less often. With continued commitment, you’ll reach a point where not smoking feels natural.
