People trying to quit smoking should not reach for e-cigarettes or vapes as their first choice to butt out, a new Canadian guideline says.
Instead, clinicians should stay updated on whether their patients smoke or not, and offer them options to quit that have been proven effective, including medications, nicotine replacements and counselling.
Those interventions boost a person's odds of quitting for good in the long term, the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care said in Monday's issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal . The guideline conditionally recommends against e-cigarettes.
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