Health Department 2015 Annual Report | Page 9

Motivated to Quit Maria Mendoza, a client with the Williams Consent Decree program, no longer centers her life around smoking. For more than 10 years, she had lived in a nursing home where she spent most of each day in a room designated for smokers. She smoked a pack and a half of cigarettes each day in that room. Upon joining the Health Department’s smoking cessation program, she began meeting with a tobacco treatment specialist, attending weekly group sessions, and using NRT products. She says the things she learned about cigarettes through the specialist motivated her to quit. “I didn’t realize how many toxins are in a cigarette,” said Mendoza. “When I knew what I was inhaling, it was scary to think of what those chemicals were doing to my body.” As part of the program, she submitted a daily count of how many cigarettes she smoked. “Having to inform someone how much I smoked each day also helped me to quit,” she said. She began to reduce the amount of cigarettes she smoked each day, using the nicotine patch and gum to ease her cravings. In a few months’ time, she made it down to smoking two cigarettes per day. On Christmas Day of 2014, she officially quit altogether and has been smoke-free for more than a year. Successfully quitting motivated her to address other issues in her life. For instance, she lost weight, changed her diet to address her diabetes, and got a part-time job as a cashier at a local store. Maria Mendoza says she feels like she has a new life after she quit smoking as a result of the Health Department’s smoking cessation program. 40% of the Health Department’s cessation clients reduced or quit their tobacco use. “I feel like I have a new life,” she said. 9