Stop Smoking Laser | Stop Smoking Laser

Stop Smoking Laser

There are fewer places to smoke these days than ever before. If arguments about stinky clothes, guilt of hurting others with your second-hand smoke, or threats of heart attack, emphysema, or cancer, don’t encourage you to try to quit, then, maybe the inconvenience eventually will? Although, smokers contend that underlying depression, nervousness, or stress causes their habit.

Those who have finally had enough, and seriously try to quit, find it is the most difficult thing they’ve ever tried to do. Frustrated, they resume the habit because “nothing worked.” They don’t think about the brief time, when they weren’t smoking, when their sense of smell returned, their blood pressure dropped, they regained more motor coordination, and they could breathe easier and had more stamina, without coughing or feeling fatigued!

When quitting “cold turkey” doesn’t work; when patches, gum, and hypnosis fail; stop smoking laser might be a successful and relatively inexpensive alternative. Stop smoking laser is a 40-year-old treatment in Europe. Its been used in Canada for almost 20 years. It’s a relatively new method of curbing the smoking habit in the U.S. (used since 2001). Europe claims a 90% success rate.

Any treatment you choose should be accompanied with education, training, and intervention consultations. However, the soft, low-impact, stop smoking laser is no more invasive than a compact disc laser, and is purported by patients to relieve stress and control urges to overeat as well as to smoke. Laser light beams are targeted to median, arms, hands, wrists, and ear areas. The stop smoking laser process is similar to acupuncture, except it is painless. In fact, patients have claimed the stop smoking laser is relaxing.

Stop smoking laser has side effects, much like any other treatment. Drowsiness or light-headedness may result, so driving immediately afterwards is not advised.

The stop smoking laser is all-natural. So, if you’re currently taking prescription meds, the treatment should not affect you any differently than anyone not taking medication(s).

It’s reported (by LaserCare) that one 30-minute treatment is generally all that’s needed. However, it is important the patient learns through the additional consultation how to handle the habit and reduce stress. It isn’t the actual treatment that takes the time. It is the consultation to learn how to handle the physical and psychological aspects of the habit.

The stop smoking laser treatment is typically under $450, and some insurance plans will help pay for it.

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