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RH

 Nicotine patches for pupils, aged 12
By Paul Stokes
(Filed: 21/12/2005)

Children as young as 12 are to be offered nicotine patches by school
nurses to help them stop smoking.

In some cases pupils are using their dinner money to buy cigarettes
instead of food.

The scheme is being introduced at six secondary schools in County
Durham after a successful anti-tobacco pilot project.

Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) will be available to 12- to
17-year-olds who show signs of an addictive habit and their treatment
will be closely monitored.

School nurses and youth workers will be trained and advised by the
national organisation Quit, which helps people to overcome smoking.

Children will be encouraged to seek the approval of their parents to
use the patches. The four-week course will be free.

Derwentside Primary Care Trust and the Government's Sure Start scheme
have developed the initiative at a time of growing concern about
smoking among children.

Iain Miller, a smoking cessation adviser with the trust, said: "Young
people deserve the same opportunities to break their addiction as
older people do.

"It does not take long for young people to be addicted to nicotine. By
the time they have overcome the spluttering start to smoking and
learned to smoke three full cigarettes, inhaling the smoke properly,
they can be displaying the key signs of addiction.

"NRT is not appropriate for all young people in stopping smoking, but
those who have developed addiction will be able to double their
chances of success if they use NRT and are four times more likely to
be successful if they use NRT and specialist support."

Kathy Camsell, the school nursing leader for Derwentside, said:
"Helping these young people to stop smoking is one of the biggest
impacts we are likely to have on their future health."

Jaime Battye, a health promotion specialist for Sure Start in Stanley,
one of the towns involved, said that trends in smoking there were well
above the average for the area.

He said: "If we can help young people to address their smoking then we
may be able to start to impact upon their parents and guardians."

National statistics suggest that among children aged between 11 and 15
seven per cent of boys and 10 per cent of girls smoke, while among
16-year-olds as many as 16 per cent of boys and 26 per cent of girls
smoke regularly.

Figures for north-east England are believed to be marginally higher
than the national average.

31 January 2005[Global]: Nicotine patches for classroom smokers





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