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No Tobacco Month: Pregnancy, a crucial time to quit smoking

October 28, 2024

“ My partner used to tell me: you'll never be able to stop smoking! My reward was to taunt him...", laughs Fanny, mother of a newborn, Telio, who like many pregnant women, has tried to drastically reduce her tobacco consumption. I had tried before, but it had not been conclusive. Now I did not want to poison this child that I had been waiting for 11 years.", said this 42-year-old woman from Lyon, who was being treated at the Femme Mere Enfant hospital, five days after giving birth.

With the help of a tobacco specialist midwife, she is " down to 15 cigarettes, then six, five, four, three… » « I was proud. The last two, early in the afternoon and before bedtime, are hanging on" she explains to AFP as the No Tobacco Month campaign approaches in November.

If pregnancy is a crucial time to quit smoking, for the health of the future mother and that of her child, one in two smokers in France fails to quit, sometimes complicated by social difficulties, unequal access to support and a lack of information. Pregnancy is a very interesting lever but the most dependent women cannot stop. The challenge is not to make them feel guilty but to support them" says David Saint-Vincent, psychologist at Rouen University Hospital.

“Fear of being lacking”

The consequences can be serious for 85,000 children born each year to mothers who smoke up until the third trimester (121,000 women): " Prematurity, reduced birth weight, increased risk of addictions and smoking, psychiatric disorders, obesity and asthma...", recalls the Ministry of Health. However, weaning, even at the end of pregnancy, will have " a benefit“, explains Marie Van der Schueren, tobacco specialist at Caen University Hospital. “ The means to stop exist, but you still need to know how to prescribe them and use them.“ 

Those who do not succeed at the beginning of pregnancy " have a physical dependence on nicotine", says Maud Catherine Barral, the midwife who followed Fanny. They are given nicotine substitutes: a patch combined with gum, lozenges, an inhaler, a spray". Reimbursed on prescription and without ceiling by Health Insurance, these substitutes can be prescribed by doctors, nurses, midwives or physiotherapists.

Smokers have " fear of being lacking " but " When they find the right dose, they are very surprised to feel so good without smoking. " reports Corinne Adler, a tobacco specialist midwife at the Parisian maternity hospital Les Bluets. " Nicotine does not cause illness, unlike the combustion of a cigarette which releases 4,000 toxic compounds. But it does cause dependency: to wean the woman gently, do not hesitate to give her enough nicotine. Then you will have to help her wean herself off the substitutes." she said.

Read alsoLegalization of cannabis in Canada: major effects on pregnant women

“Young, precarious mothers”

“ According to scientific data obtained in a French study, succeeding in making at least three repeated one-week stops, thanks to tobacco monitoring, rather than continuing to smoke a few cigarettes a day, allows a significant increase in the baby's birth weight.", reports Doctor Anne-Laurence Le Faou, addiction specialist at the Pompidou hospital in Paris.

But support is not always accessible to " young mothers, in precarious situations, in socio-economic difficulty“, underlines Dr Van der Schueren. “ For some, it is already difficult to stop drinking alcohol… stopping smoking is experienced as a double punishment. While to optimize things, it would be necessary to stop both" she continues.

“ Financial rewards in the form of vouchers could work to help pregnant women with social difficulties quit smoking", argues Dr. Le Faou. Each woman confronted with this addiction celebrates her victories in her own way, according to Ms. Barral: " They will draw, paint, knit, walk, breathe for 10 minutes" . " A patient of Brazilian origin dances... The more you have enjoyed yourself during the day, the less frustration you have, the less frustration you have, the less you want to smoke. » Four out of five will maintain their smoking cessation.

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