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IQUIT

HHS_us_health_human_services_logo_nyreblog_com_.gifSmoke-free teen texts 


Four teenage friends text together.

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Teens who start smoking could smoke more over their lifetimes- which may be made shorter as a result. It's a good reason to quit.

But teen smoking expert Dr.Yvonne Hunt of the National Institutes of Health says quit programs are often designed for adults, and teens are not little adults - they think and talk differently, and have different smoking patterns.

So Hunt and her coworkers developed a tool to help teens quit. Teens spend a lot of time texting, so SmokefreeTXT sends six weeks of teen-friendly texts to their cellphones. Teens can register at teen.smokefree.gov.

"If teens want to enroll on the go, using their mobile phone, they can also text "QUIT" - Q-U-I-T - to the shortcode "IQUIT," which is 47848." (11 seconds)

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