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Quitting smoking, a fight against COPD

Published 8 Nov 2018 • By Louise Bollecker

Living with emphysema and severe stage 4 COPD, Carenity France member ledalle managed to quit smoking 6 years ago, without relapsing, even though he had been smoking since he was 16.

He has agreed to share his journey to quit smoking, thanks to nicotine patches, mental support and a good dose of willpower!

Discover his story below!

Quitting smoking, a fight against COPD

Hello ledalle, thank you for agreeing to share your story with us on Carenity!

First of all, how did you find out you had COPD? How much did you smoke?

After repeated bouts of bronchitis, I was diagnosed with stage 2 COPD. When I started smoking I was 16 years old; when I was diagnosed I was 54 years old and I was at one pack of 20 cigarettes a day.

[Smoking is the cause of 90% of COPD cases]

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Photo courtesy of ledalle

Did your doctor advise you to stop smoking when you were diagnosed? What kind of care did you receive? 

A lung specialist advised me to stop and had me follow up with my GP. The decision to quit was not immediate for me, because I did'nt take it very seriously... But I was still worried by the pulmonologist's warnings. So I spoke to my doctor, who helped me to start trying to stop smoking.

How did you go about quitting smoking? 

I started with nicotine patches, for a 6-month programme with follow-up and advice from my GP. At the end of my treatment with the patches, I was still smoking 4 cigarettes a day, so I went to see my pulmonologist again, all pleased with myself... Only, after the diagnosis, he told me that I should not smoke even a single cigarette ever again because my COPD was at stage 4 severe and that there was no other solution to stabilise the disease, which was now very severe.

So I opted for the e-cigarette, with zero nicotine. The advantage is that the taste isn't great so you don't become as addicted. No more ashtrays, lighters or cigarettes at home. The taste being unpleasant and having nothing else, I vaped less and less and I avoided smoking areas. I started cycling. My GP gave me some painkillers to help me and I only had the bike to let off steam in the wild.

Have your friends and family been supportive of you along your journey?

At home, no one smokes and everyone has encouraged me. It has been great to help me. I also told my work colleagues that I was quitting smoking and not to tempt me. I refused coffee breaks with smokers.

What was the hardest part of quitting smoking? Did you face any obstacles?

The hardest thing was holding out for the first 6 days, so I kept myself busy with different things. It started to get easier after 1 week of staying on my guard. After stopping the electronic cigarette, I had nothing left, and then I felt stressed. My GP helped me with some remedies to stay calm.

Have you gained weight after quitting smoking? Many patients are worried about this.

I didn't gain a kilo! I must say that I substituted my smoking with cycling.

How long has it been since you quit smoking? How do you feel physically and mentally?

It will be 6 years on 23 November since I stopped smoking. That's right, I remember the exact day I didn't pick up a cigarette! Today, I am truly living again! Even though I still have COPD (which has really improved since quitting smoking), I can smell perfumes again, I have rediscovered my taste because I no longer had a palate with tobacco, I appreciate all the good smells that I had forgotten... On the other hand, cirgarette smoke now bothers me and I can no longer stand a person who has tobacco breath!

What advice would you give other members who would like to quit smoking?

To stop smoking, you must first of all truly, deeply want to quit. Then it's important to have mental and moral support from friends and family. Above all, you have to look at the advantages and disadvantages of quitting because... there's no contest!

Many thanks to ledalle for sharing his story with us on Carenity!

Was this testimonial helpful to you? Have you tried quitting smoking yourself? What kinds of obstacles have you faced?
Give it a like and share your thoughts and comments with the community in the comments below!
Take care!


2
avatar Louise Bollecker

Author: Louise Bollecker, Community Manager France

Community Manager of Carenity in France, Louise is also editor-in-chief of the Health Magazine to provide articles, videos and testimonials that focus on patients' experiences and making their voices heard. With a... >> Learn more

10 comments


avatar
Unregistered member
on 08/11/2018

Congratulations. Support is vital and I'm pleased you had plenty of it .


gina66
on 08/11/2018

I gave smoking up in 1991 years just got up on morning and dessided to give up and went to the chemist  and ask what they had to give up andthere was some capsulescalled nickobrefine think that's how you spell it and in  2 week later i had given up and never looked back I was diagnosed with COPD  in  2014 but I am learning to live with it now with everything else I have wrong with me 


avatar
Unregistered member
on 08/11/2018

I gave up smoking the day I was rushed to hospital with breathing problems. It frightened me so much I vowed I would never smoke again. I did it cold turkey and haven't looked back. It's been ten years since I was diagnosed, the first two years I had infection after infection. The consultant said it would settle down and it did.  Try to eat healthy and keep moving to keep myself well.


Katieoxo22
on 09/11/2018

I was diagnosed some time after giving up cigarettes , I am still only mild ten years on from diagnosis, however when it is bad I find my painkillers help the breathing they are opiods.I used the NHS patch course but had given up at other times and gone back . I have never smoked now since 2006 and have also gone through a lung cancer scare. I would say take each day as it comes and never give up on quitting, but it is easy if you can avoid smoking environments in the beginning. 


JosephineO • Community manager
on 09/11/2018

@Johnt1 @gina66 @Chrissie @Katieoxo22 Thank you all for sharing your stories, giving up smoking can truly be a battle and sometimes it takes a scare or health issues to really push you to stop. Welldone to you all!

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