FREE SMOKING CESSATION
CLASSES AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC
The next series of Cooper/Clayton Method smoking cessation classes
will begin on Wednesday, April 14, in the conference facilities of
Dearborn County Hospital. Classes, which are open to the public and
offered free of charge, are scheduled on Wednesdays from 6:00 to
7:00 p.m. for 13 weeks.
Citizens Against Substance Abuse (CASA) is presenting the
Cooper/Clayton classes with funding provided by the Dearborn County
Hospital Auxiliary. Leading the group will be Tony Escamilla, R.C.P.,
a Respiratory Care Practitioner who is himself a graduate of the
Cooper/Clayton Method.
The program is named after Thomas Cooper, D.D.S., and Richard
Clayton, Ph.D., who founded the program in 1985. Dr. Cooper, a
retired professor of dentistry from the University of Kentucky, quit
smoking after 36 years of cigarette use by utilizing the program
they had devised together. Dr. Clayton is a retired professor of
sociology from UK and is also Chairman of the Tobacco Etiology
Research Network, a group of scientists studying tobacco use and
nicotine dependence.
Their method of quitting was patented in 1991. It is not “cold
turkey” but instead offers participants a choice of programs using
nicotine gum, patches or other aids, along with group support,
behavior modification and decreasing use of tobacco. Although the
classes are free of charge,
smoking cessation products are not provided for the participants.
Some insurance plans may cover the cost of smoking cessation
products.
For more information or to register, please call Mr. Escamilla at
(812) 926-1582. Participants may register in advance or on the
first night of class.