Nearly Half Of Women Who Quit Smoking While Pregnant 'Start Again After Birth'

Experts have called for better services to help mothers quit for good.

We all know smoking can have a negative impact on our own health and the health of those around us. 

But a new study has shown that almost half of women who stop smoking during pregnancy take up the habit again soon after their baby is born. 

Researchers from the University of Nottingham analysed data from 11 trials involving 571 women who tried to give up smoking to draw their conclusions.

They found that (43%) of the women who managed to stay off cigarettes during pregnancy went back to smoking within six months of giving birth.

Open Image Modal
Eric Audras via Getty Images

The same researchers later analysed 23 trials with data concerning more than 9,000 women who had signed up to programmes aiming to help them quit smoking.

They found that 87% of pregnant women were still smoking when their babies were born.

"Most pregnant smokers do not achieve abstinence from smoking while they are pregnant, and among those that do, most will restart smoking within six months of childbirth," the study reads.

"This would suggest that despite large amounts of health-care expenditure on smoking cessation, few women and their offspring gain the maximum benefits of cessation." 

Commenting on the findings, lead author Dr Matthew Jones said there is an urgent need to find better ways of helping mothers stay off cigarettes during pregnancy and after giving birth. 

"Smoking during pregnancy is a major global public health issue: a conservative estimate for the annual economic burden in the UK is £23.5 million and in the US $110 million," he said in a statement.

"Our report reveals a wide gulf between what pregnant women need to quit smoking and what our healthcare services currently provide."

The review is published in full in the scientific journal Addiction.

12 Undeniable Facts About Smoking
FACT 1(01 of12)
Open Image Modal
Every cigarette you smoke reduces your expected life span by 11 minutes. (credit:Jasper White via Getty Images)
FACT 2(02 of12)
Open Image Modal
There are roughly 10 million adults who smoke cigarettes in Great Britain. (credit:Bertrand Demee via Getty Images)
FACT 3(03 of12)
Open Image Modal
Two-thirds of smokers start before the age 18. (credit:Flying Colours Ltd via Getty Images)
FACT 4(04 of12)
Open Image Modal
The proportion of the population who are smokers has decreased since the 1970s. A sixth of the population smoke now, in comparison to nearly half of the adult population smoking in 1974. (credit:Dražen LovriÄ via Getty Images)
FACT 7(05 of12)
Open Image Modal
Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 chemical compounds including: carbon monoxide, arsenic, formaldehyde, cyanide, benzene, toluene and acrolein. (credit:murengstockphoto via Getty Images)
FACT 8(06 of12)
Open Image Modal
Smoking poses a huge risk to your cardiovascular system.It also steals some of your good cholesterol, increases the risk of clotting and temporarily raises your blood pressure. (credit:Jeffrey Hamilton via Getty Images)
FACT 9(07 of12)
Open Image Modal
Immediately after you quit smoking, your lungs and other smoke-damaged organs start to repair themselves. (credit:Oko_SwanOmurphy via Getty Images)
FACT 10(08 of12)
Open Image Modal
Smoking is England’s biggest killer. Half of all regular cigarette smokers will eventually be killed by their addiction. (credit:Westend61 via Getty Images)
FACT 11(09 of12)
Open Image Modal
100,000 smokers in the UK die every year from smoking related causes. (credit:Shui Ta Shan via Getty Images)
FACT 12(10 of12)
Open Image Modal
In 2012-13 the Government earned £12.3 billion in revenue from tobacco tax. (credit:Jasper James via Getty Images)
FACT 13(11 of12)
Open Image Modal
Usage of electronic cigarettes has tripled in the past two years. 2.1 million adults in Great Britain now use them. (credit:diego_cervo via Getty Images)
FACT 14(12 of12)
Open Image Modal
A report by Dr Robert West of University College London found that e-cigarette use from popular brands is expected to be at least 20 times safer (and probably considerably more so) than smoking tobacco cigarettes. (credit:mangojuicy via Getty Images)

Before You Go