Fear of contracting coronavirus propels some smokers to quit
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In 40 years of smoking, Katie Kennedy has tried four times to quit but always went back to cigarettes. Today, she is summoning a new mental image when a craving comes on: rows of COVID-19 patients hooked to ventilators.
Kennedy's dad also smoked. He was on a ventilator before he died, and seeing how invasive the machine was, and watching his discomfort and distress, made Kennedy vow not to die like that.
"I just decided it's time to protect my lungs as much as I can," says Kennedy, 59, who started a cessation class in Sacramento, Calif., in March. "COVID-19 is quite a motivator."
Early studies suggest that smokers who develop COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, are 14 times more likely to need intensive treatment compared with nonsmokers. Doctors in California are seizing this moment to highlight the connection between COVID-19 and smoking as another reason people should quit.
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The toll-free California Smokers' Helpline ― 1-800-NO-BUTTS — which offers free cessation advice, is redirecting research money to provide two weeks of free nicotine patches, sent directly to a caller's home.
Calls to the help line in March were down 27.5 percent compared with the same month last year — which the staff attributes mainly to people being too stressed out to consider quitting. Nonetheless, staffers say that some of the smokers who do call mention the coronavirus — and the upheaval of the state's stay-at-home order — as their inspiration to quit.
"I spoke with a gentleman last week who is seriously taking this time to reorganize his life," says Nallely Espina, a counselor with the help line. "He's setting a new routine for himself at home and staying away from his smoker friends, which was one of his main triggers."
A man in his mid-20s was prompted to call after he read a news article about how even young people who smoke could have more severe health complications from the virus, Espina says. About half of her callers are using the time at home to revamp their habits: start yoga, meditation or a healthier diet. The rest seem supremely frazzled, being trapped inside with their families.
Espina helped one dad devise new coping strategies.
"Going outside and having that cigarette, it's his time out from the kids," she says. "So for him, we decided let's still go outside, but instead of having a cigarette, maybe you spend those minutes doing a few push ups and burpees? And he loved that idea. He went for it."
California public health agencies are incorporating information about the link between smoking and the coronavirus into their social media and public outreach messages, building on a 30-year legacy of aggressive anti-smoking campaigns and policies.
The state was the first to ban smoking on airplanes and in restaurants and bars, adding a long list of other public spaces over the years that made smoking logistically difficult and culturally unpopular. As a result, California has the second-lowest smoking rate in the country ― 11.3 percent — after Utah, where only 8.9 percent of the population smokes and Mormon values are credited with discouraging the habit.
While counselors nudge smokers to quit, researchers are wondering whether California's low smoking rate will affect how the state fares during the pandemic.
"It's a really great question," says Ruth Malone, a professor emerita of nursing at the University of California-San Francisco. She has studied tobacco control policy for 20 years. "Smokers do much worse if they contract the virus, which is not too surprising given that it attacks lung tissue. There also is some new research suggesting that it might even promote transmission because of the particular pathways that it hooks on to."
Establishing a correlation between smoking and COVID-19 outcomes would require sophisticated modeling techniques, so that smoking could be isolated from the many risk factors that help determine geographic differences in the spread and severity of the virus. Those factors include population density, poverty rates, and the number of days between the arrival of the virus in a community and the enactment of mitigation measures, such as shelter-at-home orders. California was among the first states to institute such measures.
Researchers have long known that smoking makes it harder to fight off respiratory infections, because it increases mucus production and paralyzes cilia, the hairlike fibers in the respiratory tract and lungs that normally flush out invaders.
"If any organism gets down there in the lower airways, whether it's the coronavirus or another virus, you've got the mucus that it can get stuck in, and it can't get whisked away because the cilia are not working," says Dr. John Swartzberg, professor emeritus of infectious diseases at University of California-Berkeley. "So those organisms have a perfect home."
Recent scientific research indicates smoking may also increase a person's chance of contracting this particular coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, because of tobacco's effect on a cell receptor called angiotensin converting enzyme II (ACE2). Scientists believe the coronavirus latches on to this receptor and uses it to enter cells, says Marcos García-Ojeda, an immunologist at UC-Merced. The problem is that smoking increases levels of ACE2
Imagine a human cell as a house with doors and windows where the virus can enter, García-Ojeda explains: "If you smoke, now you have increased the amount of windows and doors for the virus to come in," he says.
Still, other scientists hypothesize that the virus enters cells through a different receptor — one that nicotine may be able to block. Researchers in France plan to explore whether wearing a nicotine patch may help prevent infection, while acknowledging that smokers who do develop COVID-19 are more likely to experience more severe symptoms.
Tobacco-control advocates are calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to collect more robust data on the connection between smoking and the coronavirus. The development of a reliable and widely available coronavirus antibody test could also help characterize the connection.
"Once we start doing very robust antibodies studies, we'll be able to take a population of people infected and sese how many of them are smokers versus nonsmokers. Then you could see what the morbidity in each group is," says Swartzberg. "That study would be very simple to do."
Figuring out whether low smoking rates contribute to a reduction in overall infections would be harder, requiring more complex models that can control for other potential factors. For example, the smoking rate in New York City, which became a huge coronavirus hot spot, is roughly the same as California's. That could either invalidate the idea that a low smoking rate is protective, experts say, or indicate that smoking is just one of many, many variables that influence the impact of the outbreak.
"[California] went to physical-distancing policies and closing nonessential businesses a few days earlier than New York. I think those were a critical few days," says Dr. John Balmes, a pulmonologist and professor of medicine at UCSF. California cities also tend to be less densely populated than Eastern cities, Balmes adds.
In the meantime, doctors are relying on what they do know about smoking's harms to persuade people to try to quit smoking now.
"Once you stop smoking or vaping, your lungs, your immune system, they start getting better within minutes," says Dr. Elisa Tong, a physician at UC-Davis and project director for the University of California Tobacco Cessation Leadership Center.
Katie Kennedy of Sacramento has been learning these lessons at her smoking cessation class, which moved to online sessions. Being cooped up at home has presented some challenges for her.
"My husband smokes," Kennedy says. "And that's probably the biggest trigger." It was their ritual, to smoke together. The times she has relapsed, it was always with him. Now that they're stuck at home together around the clock, there's constant temptation.
"There is the thought that passes through my brain, 'Oh, he's going out for a cigarette. That sounds good,'" she says. "Well, when I get that urge, I know it's the nicotine talking. So I pop a nicotine lozenge and take a deep breath and try to busy myself with something else."
This story is part of NPR's health reporting partnership with KQED and Kaiser Health News.
Copyright 2020 KQED. To see more, visit KQED.