What Quitting Smoking Will Do for Your Health

Your health begins to improve as quickly as 20 minutes after you smoke your last cigarette. Here are the health milestones you can expect if you quit smoking today.

Published: Thursday 01 October 2020


Since the first Stoptober in 2012, the annual stop-smoking campaign has skyrocketed in popularity. Founded on the evidence that smokers who quit for 28 days are five times more likely to quit for good, the initiative encourages smokers to give up the habit for the month of October. As it enters its ninth year, it is apparent that the government’s national stop smoking campaign has been a resounding success. Between 2010 and 2018, the percentage of people in England who smoke fell from 21% to a record low of 14.4%. This year, that number has already fallen to 13.9% - and campaigners hope to get it even lower.

The status of smoking in the UK has changed drastically in the last half century. In 1962, less than 50 years ago, more than 80% of British men and 40% of British women smoked. While the first identifiable link between tobacco smoking and lung cancer was discovered in the 1920s, it took decades for scientists to confirm it. After a series of preliminary studies conducted in the 1950s, the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) published a groundbreaking paper confirming beyond all doubt that smoking tobacco greatly increased the likelihood of developing lung cancer.

Despite the RCP’s demands that the government take action to stamp out smoking among the UK population, it took some time before their findings started to reach a wider audience. It wasn’t until the mid-1970s, at which point 45% of the population still smoked, that Britons started quitting in greater numbers. Around 30% of the population still smoked in the mid-1990s. But a raft of new legal measures and campaigns put in place since then - including the ban on smoking in enclosed public places and an increase in the legal age to buy cigarettes from 16 to 18 - caused the numbers to decline quite rapidly.

There are a number of reasons a person might want to stop smoking. Perhaps they’re concerned for their family, or they have a health condition that smoking exacerbates. But the root of it is simple: not smoking is far, far better for your health - and the health of those around you. How much better? Here’s a rundown of what would happen to your health if you smoked your very last cigarette today.


It may feel a bit rubbish at first

While the physical benefits of stopping smoking are almost innumerable, the immediate psychological impact is what makes it so difficult to do. Smoking affects every system in your body - meaning that you could feel a diverse range of symptoms upon quitting. This is particularly true for heavy smokers: if you’re used to higher amounts of nicotine, the withdrawal symptoms are likely to be worse for a while.

Here are some common symptoms people experience after quitting smoking:

While not everyone who quits smoking will experience all these symptoms, they collectively are what can make it so difficult to quit. This is why people who quit smoking often do so with the help and supervision of their doctor or local pharmacy, who can advise on how to deal with withdrawal symptoms and recommend supplementary treatments to make the journey easier.

But the rewards are almost endless

While kicking the habit can be difficult at first, the good news is that the health benefits, both long-term and short-term, are almost endless. Once you’re over the hump, you can look forward to healthier organs, increased energy levels, lower blood pressure, and greatly reduced risk of major diseases, to name but a few.

Here’s a timeline of what happens to your body after you finish your last cigarette - from 20 minutes to 15 years.

The bottom line

Quitting smoking is often a huge challenge. The immediate withdrawal symptoms and nicotine cravings can make it all too easy to relent and start smoking again. But when compared to the myriad of health benefits that result from quitting, the short-term difficulties are a drop in the ocean. And if you do find it too challenging, there are a variety of treatments that can make it much easier to quit for good.