A new iPhone app
that helps people to stop smoking was launched today by Public
Health Minister Gillian Merron.
To coincide with ’No Smoking Day’ on the 10 March, the Department
of Health has released the first official NHS ‘Quit Smoking’ app
for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Available from iTunes, www.smokefree.nhs.uk and
NHS Choices, it will:
· Provide daily hints and tips to manage cravings;
· Keep a
running tally on how much money quitters have saved since they
stopped smoking;
· Track the number of days, hours and minutes
since quitting;
· Include a direct link to the stop smoking
helpline so they can speak with an adviser when they need to;
· Help find local NHS Stop Smoking Services.
Public Health Minister Gillian Merron said:
“Quitting smoking takes a lot of effort and willpower. It is the
single best thing you can do to improve your health –
significantly reducing the risk of serious conditions such as lung
cancer and heart disease.
"Smokers who quit using free NHS support are up to four
times more likely to be successful. This new app is one of the
many innovative ways the Government is helping people quit for
good and follows the great success of the recently launched Quit
Kits, which give smokers the right tools to stop smoking.
"Our vision is to become a nation that is smokefree and
last month we launched an ambitious strategy to halve the number
of smokers by 2020.”
Smoking prematurely kills over 80,000 people in England each year
and costs the NHS up to £2.7 billion a year.
Deborah Arnott, from charity ASH, said:
“Around two thirds of smokers want to quit and try time and
again. So using modern technology to help them finally achieve
that goal is a welcome idea.”
For those that do not have an iPhone or iPod touch, they can text
the word calculator to 64746 to receive information on an NHS
Choices smoking calculator.
A similar application launched in December by the NHS to help
people keep track of their alcohol intake has been downloaded
65,000 times so far.
Notes to Editors
1. Further information on quitting smoking can be found at
www.smokefree.nhs.uk or by texting GIVE UP to 88088. 2. The table
below gives the types of mobile phones people use to access NHS
information on the internet via their mobile phone: · iPhone –
61%· iPod touch – 17%· Nokia 5800 – 2.75%· Nokia e71 – 2.11%·
Blackberry – 4% 3. The number of people smoking has fallen by a
fifth in the past decade and 337,000 people stopped smoking last
year thanks to free support from NHS Stop Smoking Services.
However, an ambitious new strategy that aims to halve the number
of smokers by 2020and do more to ensure that parents smoking in
homes and cars understand the harm it causes to their children was
launched last month. The plans are part of an ambitious new
tobacco control strategy for England which aims to reduce the
number of smokers over the next ten years from 21 to 10 per cent
of the population.
Contacts:
Department of Health
Phone: 020 7210 5221
NDS.DH@coi.gsi.gov.uk