Quitting smoking for pregnancy
Myths: Smoking and Pregnancy | Smokefree
Quitting smoking – at any point during your pregnancy – is one of the best things you can do for your baby. Learn how you can become smokefree during your pregnancy and after your baby arrives.
Myths vs. Facts
Myth #1: I’m pregnant and have been smoking, so there is no point in stopping now.
Fact: Quitting smoking at any stage of your pregnancy has health benefits for you and your baby. Even after just one day of not smoking, your baby will get more oxygen. This will help your baby’s lungs develop well. Quitting now also lowers your chances of having a baby with low birth weight.
Myth #2: Quitting smoking will be too stressful on my baby.
Fact: Quitting smoking doesn’t put extra stress on your baby. It’s one of the best things that you can do for your health and your baby’s health during pregnancy—and after the baby is born. By quitting smoking now, you will be protecting your infant from the dangers of secondhand smoke and reducing the risk of sudden infant death syndrome.
Myth #3: Smoking fewer cigarettes or switching to e-cigarettes during pregnancy is OK.
Fact: There is no safe amount of smoking. Every puff of a cigarette releases harmful chemicals that will reach your baby and affect your health too. E-cigarettes are also not harmless. Although there is still much to learn about e-cigarettes, pregnant women should not use them. The nicotine in e-cigarettes is harmful for developing babies.
Myth #4: Smoking relaxes me, and being relaxed is better for me and my baby.
Fact: Smoking may make you feel calmer, but it hurts your body more than it helps. The relaxed feeling is only temporary and whatever is causing your stress will likely return. Smoking speeds up your heart rate and increases your blood pressure. It also increases the carbon monoxide in your bloodstream, which means your baby gets less oxygen.
Myth #5: There is nothing wrong with having a small baby.
Fact: Smoking during pregnancy increases the chances of having a low birth weight baby. Babies with low birth weight are more likely to have serious health problems than normal weight babies. These problems can affect your baby’s health now, throughout their childhood, and into adulthood.
Myth #6: The only way to quit smoking is cold turkey.
Fact: Pregnant women have other ways to quit smoking besides cold turkey, which is quitting without any preparation or counseling. Smokefree Women offers many resources that can help you quit. Try signing up for a text message program, like SmokefreeMom. While some smokers try medications to help them quit, the risks of using them while pregnant are not fully known. If you’re having trouble quitting after trying different methods, be open with your doctor about your challenges and ask if medication may be right for you and your baby.
Myth #7: I smoked during my last pregnancy and had a healthy baby, so this next baby will be healthy, too.
Fact: Every time you smoke during pregnancy, you put your baby’s health at risk. If you smoked and had a healthy pregnancy in the past that does not mean your next one will be healthy, too.
Myth #8: I smoke, so I should not breastfeed my baby.
Fact: According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, mothers who smoke are encouraged to quit smoking, but can breastfeed their baby if they continue to smoke. Breast milk is good for your baby. It provides your baby with what he or she needs for healthy growth and development. Not smoking while you are breastfeeding your baby, waiting to smoke until after you breastfeed, and making your car and home smokefree are important ways to protect your baby from the effects of nicotine and secondhand smoke.
Stop smoking in pregnancy - NHS
Smoking and your unborn baby
Protecting your baby from tobacco smoke is one of the best things you can do to give your child a healthy start in life. It can be difficult to stop smoking, but it's never too late to quit.
Every cigarette you smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals, many of which are dangerous, so smoking when you are pregnant harms your unborn baby. Cigarettes can restrict the essential oxygen supply to your baby. As a result, their heart must beat harder every time you smoke.
Benefits of stopping smoking in pregnancy
Stopping smoking will help both you and your baby immediately. Harmful gases, such as carbon monoxide, and other damaging chemicals will clear from your body. When you stop smoking:
- you will reduce the risk of complications in pregnancy and birth
- you are more likely to have a healthier pregnancy and a healthier baby
- you will reduce the risk of stillbirth
- your baby is less likely to be born too early and have to face the breathing, feeding and health problems that often go with being premature
- your baby is less likely to be born with a low birth weight. Babies of smokers are, on average, lighter than other babies, which can cause problems during and after labour. For example, they are more likely to have problems keeping warm and are more likely to get infections
- you will reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), also known as "cot death"
Stopping smoking now will also help your baby later in life. Children whose parents smoke are more likely to suffer from asthma and other serious illnesses that may need hospital treatment.
The sooner you stop smoking, the better. But even if you stop in the last few weeks of your pregnancy this will benefit you and your baby.
Secondhand (passive) smoke harms your baby
If your partner or anyone else who lives with you smokes, their smoke can affect you and your baby before and after their birth. You may also find it more difficult to stop if someone around you smokes.
Secondhand smoke can also reduce your baby's birthweight and increase the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), also known as "cot death". Babies whose parents smoke are more likely to be admitted to hospital for bronchitis and pneumonia during their first year.
To find out more about quitting and to get support, your partner can call the National Smokefree helpline on 0300 123 1044 from 9am to 8pm Monday to Friday, and 11am to 4pm Saturday and Sunday.
Nicotine replacement therapy
You can use nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) during pregnancy if it will help you stop smoking and you're unable to stop without it. It's not recommended that you take stop smoking tablets such as Champix or Zyban during pregnancy.
NRT contains only nicotine and none of the damaging chemicals found in cigarettes, so it is a much better option than continuing to smoke. It helps you by giving you the nicotine you would have had from a cigarette.
You can be prescribed NRT during pregnancy by a GP or an NHS stop smoking adviser. You can also buy it over the counter without a prescription from a pharmacy.
NRT is available as:
- patches
- gum
- inhalator
- nasal spray
- mouth spray
- oral strips
- lozenges
- microtabs
If you have pregnancy-related nausea and vomiting, patches may be a better solution.
NRT patches should be used for no more than 16 hours in any 24-hour period. The best way to remember this is to remove the patch at bedtime.
Before using any of these products, speak to a midwife, GP, a pharmacist or a specialist stop smoking adviser.
By getting this specialist advice you can be sure that you're doing the best for your baby and for you.
Call the National Smokefree helpline on 0300 123 1044 from 9am to 8pm Monday to Friday, and 11am to 4pm Saturday and Sunday.
Remember, you are twice as likely to be successful at quitting if you get some support from a trained adviser.
Liquorice-flavoured nicotine products
Pregnant women are advised to avoid liquorice-flavoured nicotine products. Although there is no known risk with small amounts of liquorice flavouring, the manufacturers advise caution.
This caution is based on information about the adverse effects associated with excessive amounts of liquorice root. As other flavours are available, pregnant women are advised to choose an alternative, such as fruit or mint.
Find out more about stop smoking treatments.
E-cigarettes in pregnancy
E-cigarettes are fairly new and there are still some things we do not know. However, current evidence on e-cigarettes indicates they are much less risky than smoking.
Cigarettes deliver nicotine along with thousands of harmful chemicals. E-cigarettes allow you to inhale nicotine through a vapour rather than smoke. By itself, nicotine is relatively harmless.
E-cigarettes do not produce tar or carbon monoxide, the 2 main toxins in cigarette smoke. Carbon monoxide is particularly harmful to developing babies. The vapour from an e-cigarette does contain some of the potentially harmful chemicals found in cigarette smoke, but at much lower levels.
If using an e-cigarette helps you to stop smoking, it is much safer for you and your baby than continuing to smoke.
Unlike nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), such as patches or gum, e-cigarettes are not available on an NHS prescription. If you want to use an e-cigarette, you can still get free expert help from a stop smoking adviser.
Call the National Smokefree helpline on 0300 123 1044 for more information, or ask a midwife to refer you.
Find out more about using e-cigarettes to stop smoking.
National Smokefree helpline
The National Smokefree helpline offers free help, support and advice on stopping smoking and can give you details of local support services.
You can also sign up to receive ongoing advice and support at a time that suits you.
Information:
National Smokefree helpline: 0300 123 1044
9am to 8pm Monday to Friday, and 11am to 4pm Saturday and Sunday.
To find your nearest NHS Stop Smoking service talk to:
- a midwife
- a health visitor
- a nurse at your GP surgery
- a pharmacist
NHS Stop Smoking services can offer 1-to-1 or group sessions with trained stop smoking advisers and may have a pregnancy stop smoking specialist.
They can also offer advice about dealing with stress, weight gain and support the use of NRT (such as patches or gum), if appropriate, to help you manage your cravings.
Find out more about the effects of smoking in pregnancy, and getting support to quit, at Better Health: Start for Life
Find stop smoking services near you.
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Video: should I give up smoking?
In this video, a midwife explains how smoking can harm your baby.
Media last reviewed: 1 February 2023
Media review due: 1 February 2026
Smoking during pregnancy: truths and myths
02. 09.2018 Kilometers of articles have been written about the dangers of smoking during pregnancy, hundreds of hours of medical broadcasts have been filmed, millions of personal consultations with doctors have been completed, however, this problem is overgrown with a large number of myths and misconceptions that are passed from mouth to mouth. Let's figure out where the truth is and find out what awaits a pregnant smoker, as well as her baby, who does not have the opportunity to make a choice and, in fact, is a hostage to his own mother's bad habits.
Myth #1
Pregnant women should not quit smoking. This is a great stress for the body, dangerous for the child, can cause miscarriage or premature birth.
Truth: Quitting smoking can indeed be stressful and uncomfortable, but it's still better than continuing to smoke. It is cigarettes that can provoke placental abruption, bleeding in the expectant mother. The child at this time suffers from acute oxygen starvation, which leads to pathology in the development of his internal organs, including the brain.
Myth #2
Higher quality cigarettes won't hurt your baby
Truth: Quality cigarettes are just as harmful as cheaper ones. Expensive cigarettes differ only in that they make the smoke more palatable due to the presence of flavors in their composition.
Myth #3
During pregnancy, you can smoke electronic cigarettes, light cigarettes, hookah, or reduce the number of cigarettes per day.
Truth: A lite cigarette, e-cigarette cartridge, or hookah still contains nicotine. Once in the blood, it harms the mother and child. Replacing conventional cigarettes with lighter options or reducing the number of cigarettes smoked per day is dangerous to health and is self-deception. In addition, when smoking electronic cigarettes without nicotine additives, the combustion products of glycerin, the main substance of smoking liquid, cause irreparable harm.
Myth #4
Smoking is not dangerous in the first trimester of pregnancy.
Truth: From the moment of implantation of the zygote into the endometrium of the uterus, the fetus and the mother's body are a single whole. Everything that happens to a mother-to-be affects her baby too. It is in the first months of fetal development that smoking is especially dangerous, since during this period the formation of the most important organs of a small person takes place. Congenital deformities can result from the toxic effects of cigarettes.
Myth №5
A friend smoked during pregnancy and gave birth to a healthy child, so nothing will happen to me.
If one of your friends is lucky, this does not mean that you will be lucky. Perhaps the consequences will be minimal, and perhaps the child will be born, for example, with a cleft palate. You should not be naive to believe that an outwardly healthy baby, born to a mother smoking like a locomotive, will grow up as a healthy person. Often, by the age of 3-4, such children have problems with the heart, kidneys, and lymphatic system. Babies affected by mother smoking in the perinatal period, according to statistics, are more likely to suffer from lung disease, have weak immunity, and become hyperactive.
One of the consequences of cigarette addiction for the newborn is low birth weight. The statistics are cold-blooded: underweight babies often die in the first hours of life.
As adults, children of smokers suffer from asthma, diseases of the liver, urinary system, tumors of different localization, hypertension, heart defects, metabolic pathologies leading to obesity, type 2 diabetes.
If a mother smokes, her baby suffers more from colic than the baby of a non-smoking parent.
The effects of smoking while pregnant affect the child for at least 6 more years. WHO studies have shown that such children begin to read later, lag behind in mental and physical development compared to their peers, and pass intellectual and psychological tests worse.
Do you still want to check whether you are lucky as a friend or not?
Myth #6
Despite the fact that a pregnant woman smokes, she is in good health, which means that everything is in order.
Truth: Feeling great is not a guarantee of a normal pregnancy. If the expectant mother smokes and feels well, this does not mean the child is safe. There may not be any outward signs of a child's developmental disorder at all.
Why smoking is dangerous for parents and children:
1. Parents who smoke have reduced reproductive abilities.
In other words, conception can become problematic. In men, spermatozoa become less mobile, change shape, which prevents them from penetrating the egg. In women, the movement of the egg through the fallopian tubes is difficult, and the chances of engraftment of the embryo are reduced. That is why when planning a pregnancy, couples should give up bad habits. At the same time, smoking cannot be categorically considered as a method of contraception!
2. There are difficulties with the birth of a boy.
The Y chromosome determines the male sex of the unborn child. In its structure, it is more sensitive to negative factors affecting the occurrence of pregnancy than the "female" X chromosome. According to studies, it was possible to establish that boys are born to smoking parents twice as rarely as girls. The main reason is intrauterine death of a fetus with a Y-chromosome.
3. A child born to smoking parents is already doomed to problems in the reproductive system.
When a future mother smokes, the baby suffers from oxygen starvation of organs, which has an extremely negative effect on their formation and development.
A set of eggs in a girl is formed during her intrauterine development and is not renewed throughout her life. Smoking harms not only a woman's reproductive system, but also her daughter's reproductive system.
The sons of smoking mothers do not develop testicles that are usually smaller than the sons of non-smoking mothers. They also have less sperm count (by 20%) than their peers.
4. A smoking woman gives birth to a child addicted to nicotine.
Often these children become smokers at a young age. The risk of becoming a drug addict and shocking parents with bouts of inappropriate behavior is 5 times higher for them.
5. Sometimes the placenta is directly affected by smoking, which leads to miscarriage or intrauterine death of the fetus.
In smokers, miscarriages for one reason or another and at different stages of pregnancy occur on average twice as often. This is due to the fact that the placenta and fetus are in a state of constant lack of oxygen (hypoxia).
6. Mothers who smoke are more likely to give birth to premature babies, and those who were born on time often have significantly reduced weight (hypotrophy).
If the fetus does not receive enough nutrients and oxygen, it begins to lag behind in development. And if on average children are born with a body weight of about 3 kg and a body length of about 50 cm, for the children of smokers these figures will be 20-30 percent lower.
7. Children of smokers are often born with pathologies and developmental defects.
In 2003, it became known that there was an association between smoking in early pregnancy and the risk of having a child with facial defects (palate defects: cleft lip, cleft palate).
Smoking is also associated with limb defects, such as horse foot, underdevelopment of the joints.
Babies with Down syndrome, other things being equal, are more likely to be born to women who smoke.
8. It is very common for babies whose mothers smoked during pregnancy to have impaired lung function at birth.
In the body of a child affected by smoking, the mother is often diagnosed with a lack of surfactant - a substance that prevents the walls of the alveoli from sticking together0005 9. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome is more common in children of smoking mothers.
Modern medicine cannot reliably explain the causes of this syndrome, but the risk factors are clearly defined. The most dangerous of them is smoking during pregnancy. Numerous studies have shown that babies of smoking mothers most often die in the first months of life. It is not so important whether the expectant mothers were active or passive smokers.
10. Children of women who smoke 15–20 cigarettes a day (even if they abstained from smoking during pregnancy) get sick more often.
This is due to all of the above reasons.
This is important!
All of the above points together and each of them individually is a good reason to quit smoking. If you are pregnant, stop smoking now! Do not believe the myths and frankly false information. Smoking absolutely always forces the expectant mother and child to receive a lot of toxic substances that can break the life of an unborn person, leaving him no chance for a happy and healthy future.
Every time you want to smoke, imagine someone offering your child a cigarette, or giving it instead of a pacifier to a defenseless newborn baby. The spectacle is not for the faint of heart, right? And then look in the mirror - this "someone" you ... By inhaling cigarette smoke, you make him and your child inhale!
Source: https://www.minzdrav29.ru/news/detail.php?ID=975065
Smoking or pregnancy - choose - GAUZ GKB 2
It's no secret that smoking is a bad habit. Fortunately, a person himself decides whether to smoke or not. Children in the womb are not asked about this choice. That is why some negligent mothers poison the body of their children against their will.
Specialists advocate smoking cessation in the first days of pregnancy, and even better - before conception. This prevents the development of congenital heart defects in the fetus. Studies have shown that mothers who smoke in the first trimester have a 20% risk of having a baby with a heart defect. Moreover, a pregnant mother with every cigarette smoked increases the risk of premature birth of a baby. So whether your child is healthy or not is up to you.
It is much easier to acquire an addiction than to fight its negative consequences. If in youth a cigarette helped to prove itself, to stand out among people like themselves with a cigarette in their mouths and a million complexes behind their shoulders, then with age it takes too high a price for youthful emancipation. Smoking baby. If you do not want to quit smoking during pregnancy (namely, “do not want to”), you doom your child to a number of pathologies in advance. In obstetric practice, the symptom complex caused by the adverse effects of tobacco is called "fetal tobacco syndrome". Complications can develop both in the woman herself and in the fetus, often the pathology manifests itself after the birth of the child and progresses with age. Nicotine and toxic combustion products (carbon monoxide) enter the mother's bloodstream, and from there to the placenta and poison the fetus. By itself, nicotine constricts blood vessels, which reduces the supply of oxygen and nutritious foods. This can lead to fetal hypoxia, prematurity or immaturity of the fetus (low weight at full term). The most terrible thing is that intrauterine death of the fetus can be a consequence of smoking. This is not bullying, but scientifically proven fact.
Smoking doubles the chance of a stillbirth. The risk of spontaneous abortion in women who smoke during pregnancy is 30-70% higher than in non-smokers, and the risk of miscarriage, according to some reports, reaches 96%. Nicotine causes spasm (contraction) of blood vessels, leads to an increase in blood viscosity by almost 30%, resulting in thrombosis of the placental vessels and termination of pregnancy. The carbon monoxide that enters the blood during smoking can be more dangerous than nicotine itself, since, when it enters the blood of an infant, it accumulates in the blood cells (forming inactive carboxyhemoglobin instead of active hemoglobin), making them unable to transport oxygen to tissues. Moreover, the concentration of carboxyhemoglobin in the blood of the fetus is usually 10-15% higher than in the blood of the mother. At the same time, the most sensitive organs of the fetus (brain, kidneys, heart) suffer from oxygen starvation. Smoking adversely affects the process of laying and development of the neural tube in the fetus, leads to the birth of anencephalos, infants with congenital mental anomalies, with a cleft palate and a cleft lip.
Smokers more often than non-smokers give birth to children with heart defects and developmental defects of the nasopharynx, inguinal hernia, strabismus. Later, you can only blame yourself for the fact that the baby “smoking” in the womb is lagging behind in school, irritable, uncontrollable, and also suffering from asthma. If he does not die in his sleep in infancy (and this is not uncommon), then believe me, when he grows up, he will most likely become a heavy smoker. The same symptoms await the future baby if the woman is constantly next to a smoking family member. I want to have a healthy baby! You can help a woman who smokes, but only if she herself wants it.
If you wish, you can quit smoking with any number of cigarettes smoked per day. But all specialists are powerless if a pregnant woman does not want to quit. There are women who try to minimize the number of cigarettes they smoke per day during pregnancy. This is meaningless, as it does not give the desired result. If you give birth to a sick and weak child, smoking only two cigarettes a day, who will you blame for the existing pathology? Of course, only yourself. Even one cigarette can have irreversible consequences.