Nicotine patches 'don’t work in pregnancy'

3D printed ovaries could help not only women who have undergone cancer treatment, but those who have experienced problems such as early menopause or genetic diseases. Picture: Freeimages

3D printed ovaries could help not only women who have undergone cancer treatment, but those who have experienced problems such as early menopause or genetic diseases. Picture: Freeimages

Published Mar 13, 2014

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Paris - Nicotine patches fail to help pregnant women to stop smoking, according to a study published by the British Medical Journal (BMJ).

Researchers in France asked more than 400 women who smoked at least five cigarettes a day to try either a nicotine patch or a dummy patch called a placebo.

Only 11 women - 5.5 percent - in the nicotine patch group quit smoking by the time they gave birth, compared with 10 women, or 5.1 percent, in the placebo group.

The average birthweight of the babies was about the same in both groups, but blood pressure was significantly higher among the nicotine-patch users.

The scientists, led by Ivan Berlin, a pharmacologist at the Pitie-Salpetriere University Hospital in Paris, said they were disappointed.

The results show that drugs to help wean pregnant women off smoking do not work and “behavioural support” - help from counsellors or quit-smoking groups - remains essential, they said. - Sapa-AFP

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