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Study
to test treatments against smoking relapse
Researchers
at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia campus and the
New York Psychiatric Institute have launched the first federally-funded
study to test whether extended use of smoking cessation
drugs can help ex-smokers avoid relapse. The study will
test whether people who have just quit smoking with the
help of Zyban, the nicotine patch, and counseling can benefit
from a four-month maintenance regime of medication and supportive
counseling. Lirio S. Covey, Ph.D., the lead investigator,
is Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at Columbia
and Director of the Psychiatric Institute's Smoking Cessation
Clinic.
Participants
will first enter a two-month smoking cessation program.
Those who quit will enter a four-month maintenance phase
under one of three regimes: counseling with nicotine gum,
counseling and Zyban (a non-nicotine smoking cessation pill),
or counseling and placebo. Participants will be monitored
for another six months to assess their ability to continue
not smoking. People who smoke at least 15 cigarettes daily,
who have smoked for at least one year, who have made at
least one previous attempt to quit, who are free of significant
illness, and who can
make the required clinic visits are invited to participate.
Interested
persons may call Cathy Loduca at 212-543-5905.
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