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Smoking Cessation Support Groups New York NY

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Smoking Cessation Support Groups. You will find informative articles about Smoking Cessation Support Groups, including "Smoking during Pregnancy". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in New York, NY that can help answer your questions about Smoking Cessation Support Groups.

Alcoholism Council Of New York, Inc.
212/252-7001
2 Washington St, 7/F
New York, NY
Passaic County Council On Alcoholism And Drug Abuse Prevention, Inc.
973/473-3366
880 Clifton Avenue
Clifton, NJ
Henry Michael Koegel
212-674-3998
412 Sixth Ave.
New York, NY
Carl Berg
(212) 244-1776
286 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY
Katherine M. Gallagher
(212) 758-9260
141 E 55th St, Ste 1H
New York, NY
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence Of Hudson County, Inc
201/653-6776
309-311 Newark Avenue
Jersey City, NJ
Long Island Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence, Inc.
516/747-2606
207 Hillside Avenue
Williston Park, NY
Steven J. Glicksman
(212) 532-0387
444 Park Ave S
New York, NY
Sally Graham
(212) 803-5412
7 E 14th St, #1410
New York, NY
Andrew B. Weiss
(212) 780-9472
24 E 12th Street
New York, NY
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Smoking during Pregnancy

Smoking during Pregnancy

Smoking and Pregnancy- The Risks

Smoking slowly kills the healthy individual and its continuation during pregnancy increases the health risks by many times. When you choose to smoke even during pregnancy, you not only risk your life but also the life of your baby. If your pregnancy is termed high risk and you still smoke then the complications worsen and you thus risk the life of your child. The smoke that you inhale goes directly to the placenta, which is the connection between you and your baby. Toxins like carbon monoxide and nicotine get in the blood and the baby feeds on the mother, it means that when you smoke the baby also smokes. Such toxic substance hampers the proper supply of essential nutrients to the baby.
Smoking can cause low weight of the baby after birth, and fourteen percent premature deliveries. Even if the mother is not smoking herself and some other member in the family smokes the passive smoking or the second hand smoke affects a great deal on the baby’s health. The American Lung Association has shown through their studies that the baby suffers from low birth weight and other defects due to second hand smoke. Your pregnancy thus gives you a great chance of quitting time and you can as well avoid further health risks. The risks for the baby due to the smoking of the mother or second hand smoke do continue after the birth of the baby. The baby is more vulnerable to lung disorders, colds, difficulty in learning, and there are also problems with the natural physical development of the baby.

There are many other risks involved in smoking during pregnancy. When one smokes, the body gets poor supply of oxygen and this can result in pregnancy complications like damage to the brain of the fetus, miscarriages, ectopic pregnancy, and tubal pregnancies. The infant death syndrome is also cited as the direct result of smoking during pregnancy. The habit of smoking is closely related to breast-feeding, it c...

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