Hypnosis, Cambridge, anxiety relief using hypnotherapy
The hypnosis clinic About the hypnosis clinic Hypnotherapy in Cambridge Treatments available Stop Smoking Your questions answered Arrange appointments Self help tips Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals Hypnotherapy links

How to Stop Smoking in Cambridge

How to Stop Smoking in Cambridge - The Hypnosis Clinic

Stop Smoking in Cambridge    A single 90 minute session, the answer for heavy or social smokers

For stop smoking using Hypnotherapy in Cambridge, Dr Jim Rutherford operates his practice out of the Frank Lee Centre on the Addenbrookes Hospital Site and the Sanctuary, on the Hills Road.

Print a brochure   or for a confidential discussion call 0779 2108272 or e-mail  Click Here (e-mails are answered personally usually the same day)

Quote      "I am now a non smoker...weight loss working too thanks to you!"

Quote      "I don't know how you did it but I have just stopped smoking and snacking....

Quote      "This is to thank you again:  I have noticed that I just don't even think about smoking..."

Quote       "I came to see you on 9th January and I have to admit I was a little skeptical that a single session would stop me smoking after 18 years. Well it did, I haven't smoked since, feel like a new person and I think it's fantastic.... The best hour and a half I've ever spent and I can't thank you enough for helping me."  

                                                             

Stop Smoking     A one session answer for heavy or social smokers. Enjoy your last cigarette just before the therapy session. Then 90 minutes later leave a non smoker.

Smoking a cigarette shortens your life by 6 minutes. Twenty cigarettes per day means that your life is shortened by almost 3 days for each month that you smoke.

Twenty cigarettes per day costs per month almost £140.

Print a brochure       e-mail   [email protected]


Start planning now what to do with the rest of your life and what to spend that money on.


A background to Stop Smoking;

Many smokers believe, or are led to believe, that they are addicted to tobacco products. They may be surprised to learn that of all the scientific studies carried out on the subject of this supposed addiction, a surprising number are ambivalent on the matter.

It is eye-opening to compare the behaviour of those who take substances that are accepted to create a chemical, body-dependant addiction and smokers. A true addict simply has to take the substance they are addicted to and make sure that they take the correct amount of that substance or they suffer serious side effects. These side effects may include nausea, heart palpitations, hallucinations, vomiting and lapsing into a coma. On the other hand, if a smoker is unable to smoke, perhaps due to a stay in hospital, a long plane journey or simply having a bad cold or sore throat, they may become a little grumpy or short tempered, but suffer none of the previously-mentioned side effects. If a smoker who usually smokers 30 cigarettes a day for some reason only smokes 20, they do not have to 'make-up' the amount of tobacco they did not take the next day whilst a true addict simply has to ingest the 'correct' amount of the substance that they are addicted to.

Those smoking-cessation methods that treat smoking as an addiction (patches, gum etc) have a very low success rate, acknowledged to be around 23%. The makers of the drug Zyban state that the drug is only effective if it is taken in conjunction with 'psychological intervention'.

Hypnotherapy is the most effective form of psychological intervention. In the vast majority of cases, provided a smoker truly wants to quit smoking, a single session (taking around a total time of one and a half hours) is effective.

Links to interesting facts about smoking and nicoitne; click on the links below;

The article that started the furror about the tobacco industry

Toxicity of Nicotine

Physiology effects of Nicotine

Articles in Full

 

 

 

 

Home | About | Contact | Treatments | Enquiries | Appointments | Self Help | Links