Nurses Smoking: Compassion Instead of Judgement

In this article the author goes over some of the reasons nurses continue to smoke and urges a compassionate approach with an encouraging touch toward all who struggle with habits that are hard to overcome. Nurses General Nursing Article

My friend excused herself after a long meeting. I knew where she was going - to the cold parking deck, to get in her car, to have a cigarette, to still her craving so she could get back to work and concentrate on her job.

If you have watched any movies about the 1960's lately, you probably realize that many fewer people smoke now than did at that time. In '65, a little over 40% of the population smoked (including large numbers of health care providers!) and now a fewer than 15% do (Center for Disease Control and Prevention)."Recent declines in smoking among health care professionals may reflect the impact of national tobacco control policies and efforts focused on reducing smoking among registered nurses. After little change in prevalence from 2003 to 2006-2007, the drop in smoking among registered nurses was more than twice that of the 13 percent decrease in the population." (Study Examines Prevalence of Smoking Among Health Care Professionals - For The Media - JAMA Network) While there is encouraging news, smoking in the general population and among nurses remains a commonplace occurrence.

Most of us have friends who smoke, nurse friends, co-workers, and others. Smoking or not smoking is a touchy topic and just bringing it up makes people want to go to different sides of the room, flinging hot, angry flaming arrows at one another. While we all have opinions, and those opinions matter, especially in the face of compelling evidence, we do ourselves and others a disservice when we retreat and point fingers at each other. How can we keep reaching out to each other, being patient and compassionate no matter what our particular challenges are?

Bad habits are notably hard to overcome and substance abuse, including addictions to nicotine, can be particularly noisome. For anyone who has any type of bad habit-most of us have at least one-we know how hard it is to overcome. Listing all types of bad habits here will not help us proceed in our conversation for as humans we automatically want to compare our bad habit to smoking and say-"Well, mine isn't THAT bad." Maybe not. But let's all admit that it's pretty hard to compare bad habits and it's even harder to cease a bad habit. Our tendency to look at others' faults with less compassion than we look at our own is pretty universal and sadly also difficult to overcome. Myriad studies have been done on overcoming the compulsion of bad habits and no matter how you look at them, they all say the same thing: giving up a bad habit is hard work and relapsing is as easy as taking a puff or two.

So first, how can we cultivate an attitude of grace and compassion toward members of our profession who continue to struggle with an addiction to nicotine? One thing that might help is to realize that we are all susceptible to the clinging effects of our own vices. Being honest with ourselves and vulnerable to one another, we take the first step in reaching out to a friend who is struggling with support and care instead of judgment and condemnation.

It's hard for people who are not addicted to nicotine to fully understand its effects and the pervasive reach it has throughout smokers' lives: home, travel, work, entertainment-all can be powerful influences in keeping a person tied to their habit.

  1. Long-term smokers may have linkage behaviors or triggers that contribute to the continuation of the habit-things like group smoking, an association between a morning coffee and a cigarette, alcohol, good feelings perceived to be related to smoking, less anxiety, even daily bowel rituals.
  2. The process of withdrawal can be scary for some-especially if they have gone through it before-and lead them to put off the day they quit.
  3. Nicotine increases dopamine levels and produces a temporary feeling of well-being, of less anxiety and of increased concentration, all reinforcing the behavior and keeping smokers coming back for one more. While these perceived benefits are small and time/dose limited, quitting to "normalize" the body's equilibrium can be daunting for some.
  4. Defiance of established norms or expected behavior-For a variety of reasons, people sometimes continue to smoke to defy societal expectations. There are times when society can be perceived as imposing a veritable straitjacket of limitations and guidelines, leading some to throw up their hands and disregard some of the more basic cautionary information, including the tsunami of information about the dangers of nicotine.
  5. Concerns about weight gain- Weight issues may seem to pale in comparison to the side effects of smoking but this is a real concern for many.

With great sadness, a physician friend once pointed out ruefully, "I have had some success in encouraging people from all walks of life to quit-including some nurses. But at other times, I have failed. I wish that more times I had pointed out that the real danger of smoking is not dying, it is actually continuing to live in the face of the limitations that long-term addiction invariably imposes on the human body. In the end, people wish they could die."

Smoking is a bad habit. No doubt about it. But maybe we can find ways to offer each other more compassionate support and less judgment. How can we be a force of encouragement to our peers?

Joy Eastridge

I haven't read the comments because I'm sure they are flaming, but I wanted to thank you for the compassion your article shows. I am a current smoker and a former drug addict. I can say that my experience is that quitting the hardest of drugs was easier for me by miles than quitting smoking.

I know it's awful and I keep it to myself, don't smoke in uniform or at work, etc. I've tried to quit countless times...and I will keep trying until I succeed. But in the meantime, compassion inspires me to quit a lot more that the vitriol that some people like to hand out. If the goal is to encourage people to quit, support goes a lot further than venom.

Thank you for being supportive.

Specializes in LTC, Rehab.
I haven't read the comments because I'm sure they are flaming, but I wanted to thank you for the compassion your article shows. I am a current smoker and a former drug addict. I can say that my experience is that quitting the hardest of drugs was easier for me by miles than quitting smoking.

Thank you for being supportive.

Well I'd like to congratulate you for beating the drug problem. One step at a time.

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Patient Safety.
If it were so, nicotine gums would have the same, although weaker, effect. Not patches, as nicotine in them goes through liver first bypass and has no peak concentration. Also, central acting nicotine agonist galantamine (Razadine) would be WAY more popular than old-fashioned therapy for mild Alzheimer, and Chantix would gave WAY more indications than it has.

Nothing like this is observed. Although it doesn't deny the fact that smoking still be useful as placebo.

Hey KatieMI, I have to respectfully disagree with some evidence to back me up. Nicotine is being used to treat ADHD, depression, Parkinson's, Alzheimers and ulcerative colitis (see references at end of comment).

I did some research and found that there is definitely a link between smoking and mental illness. Smoking is so much more common in folks with mental illness - folks with mental illness are 70% more likely to smoke - maybe folks are using it to counteract side effects of medications, and the effects of the nicotine can be helpful with ADHD and depression. There are much healthier and safer ways to treat, and that's the important message.

"Experts attribute the link between smoking and mental illness to a number of factors. Biochemistry probably plays some part. "Nicotine is a very powerful drug, and that's true whether somebody has a mental illness or not," says Judith Prochaska, PhD, MPH, a psychologist at the Stanford Prevention Research Center at Stanford University.

In some cases, people with mental illness may be using tobacco to mask symptoms or medication side effects, McAfee says. Some might also be more affected by nicotine withdrawal. "People with panic attacks, for instance, may have a harder time quitting because the symptoms of withdrawal - such as increased heart rate - can trigger an attack," he says.

Nicotine can improve attention and concentration, Morris says - appealing benefits for some mental health patients. However, nicotine's benefits are short lived. Its effects last only about five minutes at a time, Morris says. In any case, he adds, the possible advantages of nicotine shouldn't equate to a free pass for smokers. "Of course there's a benefit to any drug, that's why people use them," he says. "But there are better coping strategies."

Smoking and mental illness

I also found scientific evidence for the use of nicotine in treating ADHD and depression - I am listing the articles here:

Several lines of evidence suggest that nicotine may be useful in treating the symptoms of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Nicotine effects on adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. - PubMed - NCBI

This one really struck me: Nicotine lessens the symptoms of depression in nonsmokers: Nicotine Lessens Symptoms Of Depression In Nonsmokers -- ScienceDaily

go to google search bar and type in "nicotine as treatment for" - you will see a long list of diseases that are being researched - click on the one you are most interested in.

Specializes in ED, Pedi Vasc access, Paramedic serving 6 towns.

Sorry, but no compassion here. You chose to start smoking and now it is your headache to deal with, and my headache to deal with. Yes I said MY headache too.

When I pass by you, whether at the hospital campus or outside anywhere I cough and choke on your smoke as YOU poison MY lungs. When You smoke inside someone's house at a party, or your own and I enter your home through my ambulance work or as a guest I cough and choke some more, then comes the headache that lasts about an hour, even with brief exposure, along with the worsening asthma symptoms!

When I work with you I have to endure your repeated "breaks" to go outside and smoke, and since thankfully my hospital is a smoke free campus that means you have to walk to your car, smoke, and then walk back which takes about 20 minutes. You may think I do not notice, but I do. During that time I have to pick up your slack and do your work, along with mine!

When you come back from your "break" I cough and choke some more as the most disgusting smell waifs from your clothes and breath. It isn't pleasant to say the least, and its like your smoking right in front of me. The patients also have to endure the odor, just what you want to smell when you are already feeling ill.

Smoking sucks, and I have no compassion for someone who does it. It was a decision you made to start, even if it was done stupidly as a younger person, but you made it. You can make the decision to stop. I have no compassion because I suffer more than you. It is not my choice to smoke, yet I still have to breath it in, and be poisoned by your second hand smoke and the noxious odor you bring with you on your clothing, hair, skin, and breath, as do the patients you care for. It is not my choice to work with someone who must take a break at least once an hour because they are owned by cigarettes. It is definitly not my choice to work with someone who calls out sick more often either, leaving me more work to do. (I do find my smoking co-workers do seem to call out more and get sicker with even simple colds).

I love that some hospitals are Nicotine free and will not hire you, they are thinking of the health of the others you put at risk.

Annie

Specializes in Faith Community Nurse (FCN).
I haven't read the comments because I'm sure they are flaming, but I wanted to thank you for the compassion your article shows. I am a current smoker and a former drug addict. I can say that my experience is that quitting the hardest of drugs was easier for me by miles than quitting smoking.

I know it's awful and I keep it to myself, don't smoke in uniform or at work, etc. I've tried to quit countless times...and I will keep trying until I succeed. But in the meantime, compassion inspires me to quit a lot more that the vitriol that some people like to hand out. If the goal is to encourage people to quit, support goes a lot further than venom.

Thank you for being supportive.

Hi there, Thank you for your kind comment. I am so glad that you found the article to be supportive because that is exactly what I hoped for--I know I am not perfect and I sure appreciate encouragement along the way! Blessings to you as you keep working on quitting and congratulations on how far you have already come. Joy

Where's the compassion for nonsmoking people who are made ill by cigarette smoke?

Where's the compassion for nonsmoking people who are made ill by cigarette smoke?

Clearly they don't matter to the OP as the only "joy" she's handing out is to smokers who agree with her. This is what gets me. Rather than addressing the issues that are associated with smoking or trying to bridge the gap between smokers and non-smokers all we got was some sanctimonious claptrap about how we should feel sorry for smokers. This is exactly why people feel the way they do. It's not just YOUR addiction when it also affects me. It becomes my problem too. That goes for drunks who drive, addicts who steal and yes, even people who wear too much perfume. Don't get me wrong, I'll support someone in their effort to quit in any way possible (and I have) but do not ask me to be compassionate about someone else's addiction when I'm struggling to breathe because of it.

... all we got was some sanctimonious claptrap...
:cat: :D:roflmao:

I'm a former smoker. I smoked for 20 years and woke up one morning, decided to quit and that was that. I'm one of the lucky ones - it was easy for me. I don't even miss it - the smell makes me sick.

My husband isn't so lucky. I've seen him really struggle with quitting on and off for the past four years (since I quit). I do have empathy and compassion for him and anyone else that wants to quit.

But I also now understand how rude some smokers are - smoking directly outside doors to public buildings, littering and not making an effort to reduce the strong smell of smoke.

I really do see both sides. I think it's wrong and unhelpful to shame smokers, but I also think people who smoke can do more to be respectful of non-smokers (like smoking away from crowds or in parking lots, washing hands, throwing butts away, etc). I think there's room for empathy for everyone.

Specializes in NICU.

our place has a spot too,like a little shelter,and it is a non smoking property,sometimes patients are walked outside for a smoke.

Specializes in Palliative, Onc, Med-Surg, Home Hospice.
Where's the compassion for nonsmoking people who are made ill by cigarette smoke?

I want to know the same thing. Right now I am dealing with another asthma flare that I am NOT recovering from. I am doing everything I can to stay out of the hospital. I have to avoid going to a lot of places right now because I can't be sure I won't be exposed to cigarette smoke. It's really bad when I go to my doctors office (for a much needed steroid shot) and I have to deal with another patient who was smoking right outside the office.

Or when I go to the grocery store and have to walk through a haze of smoke.

What's even worse is when the paramedic who is transporting you to the ED reeks of smoke, and you are struggling to breathe already. In those cases, you are a captive audience. And I'm supposed to have some compassion: Nope.

Specializes in retired LTC.

Ex-smoker here for 40+ yrs. But I am still a bit sympathetic for those who still smoke. I remember smoking well!

Ah! the Sunday newspaper, a fresh cup of coffee and a fresh cigarette as you light up .... One of life's little pleasurable moments. Seriously.

It's just got to be that endorphin thing! Whatever the habit - nicotine, drugs, alcohol, food, gambling, hoarding, caffeine, whatever. It's that 'flush of the rush'! And we all have our own addictive monkeys-on-the-back even if we think we've concealed them well.

If given the option, I am sure smokers would prefer to NOT smoke. Deleterious health reasons, the cost, finding time, the STINKIES, that aged look, etc are all reasons that SHOULD encourage smokers to quit. But it doesn't.

I find the smell most offensive now. And I developed a second-hand- smoke asthma whereby I needed a daily inhaler. So if you choose to smoke, that's your decision, but there'll be no preachin' to the choir from me!

I don't think there will ever be an end to the addictive habits. They've been around forever. But the non-smoker like me has options.

To Viva - you could pretty much substitute my name for yours in your postings. The thing I remember most vividly when quitting was what to do with my hands during my quit.